Two companies are going to war over the rights to off-road driving simulator Spintires and revenue relating to its spin-off sequels Mudrunner and Snowrunner.
As reported by Eurogamer, the game's original publisher Oovee has reignited its feud with Saber Interactive, the employer of Spintires developer Pavel Zagrebelnyy, after issuing a press release through a legal firm containing numerous allegations against Saber. In response, Saber has filed a defamation claim against Oovee.
The on-off skirmish has been brewing for the best part of a decade, and has bubbled into a fairly high-profile case after Spintires and its spin-offs gradually found success.
For context, Spintires was developed by Saber coder Pavel Zagrebelnyy and launched in 2014. Oovee was brought on by Zagrebelnyy to publish the title, which netted the company millions in sales, while Saber was then asked to work on console versions of the original games and its two sequels (with help from Zagrebelnyy).
According to a previous report from Eurogamer published in 2016, the relationship between Oovee and Zagrebelnyy became strained years ago due to complaints from both parties relating to a lack of pay and overdue work.
Despite those issues, Oovee and Zagrebelnyy seemed to bury the hatchet and continue developing the franchise -- although that apparent truce fell apart in 2018 when the situation again turned toxic.
From that point on, it seems the key issue relates to an agreement struck in August 2016 that named Oovee as the Spintires rights owner, but acknowledged that Saber would be permitted to make "improvements and enhancements" under license.
That deal resulted in Saber becoming heavily involved in the franchise, and releasing those aforementioned spin-off
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