Developer ZA/UM is acknowledging recent allegations of ex-senior staff fostering a culture of harassment and mismanagement at the Estonian developer.
Talking to the Estonian Ekspress (translated via Google), ZA/UM's CEO Ilmar Kompus credited the studio's "toxic environment" to Disco Elysium's ousted game director Robert Kurvitz, along with art director Aleksander Rostov and former shareholder (and ex-ZA/UM UK LTD director) Saandar Taal.
"[Kurvitz and Taal] treated their co-workers very badly," said Kompus to the Ekspress. "Despite talking to them repeatedly, things did not improve. Therefore, the company was forced to fire them. [...] It would be very short-sighted of a growing international company to tolerate such behavior."
Both Kurvitz and Rostov, along with Disco Elysium writer Helen Hindpere, were allegedly "forced out" of the developer in 2021. Since the news of their firing broke this past October, Kurvitz has filed a lawsuit against his former employer without any involvement from either Rostov or Hindpere.
However, earlier today, Kurvitz and Rostov published a statement alleging their firing was brought about by Kompus and fellow Estonian businessman Tõnis Haavel. Per Rostov and Kurvitz, they were forced out after becoming minority shareholders in ZA/UM Studio OÜ, which owns everything related to Disco Elysium.
Kompus further claimed that Rostov in particular would "belittle women and co-workers in the past," and that Kurvitz conspired with Taal to "steal [ZA/UM] IP," including Disco Elysium, to sell to other "well-known large game industry companies."
In a statement to GamesIndustry, ZA/UM wrote that it "cannot and will not tolerate egregious misconduct, even from individuals who, along with the broader team,
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