
Call of Duty
writers broke contract
Game publisher Activision Blizzard has filed a counter
suit in its legal battle with two former lead developers of Call of Duty.
Activision claimed it fired Jason West and Vincent
Zampella in March because the two "morphed from valued, responsible
executives into insubordinate and self-serving schemers who attempted to hijack
Activision's assets for their own personal gain."
The outfit claimed that West and Zampella of violating
their employment contracts by meeting with Electronic Arts and using illicit
means to recruit former colleagues to join them in forming a new independent
game development studio. However an attorney for the pair called the claims
"false and outrageous" and said that Activision itself proposed
spinning off West and Zampella's studio as part of a contract renegotiation
last year.
Activision's suit counters a complaint that West and
Zampella filed against their former employer March 3, two days after being
fired as the heads of Infinity Ward, the Encino-based studio purchased by
Activision in 2002. West and Zampella claimed hat Activision fired them to
avoid paying them royalties they earned from November's Call of Duty: Modern
Warfare 2, which has generated an estimated $1.3 billion in worldwide revenue. They say that Activision owes them $36 million in
royalties and damages.
Activision's own suit reads like a Jekyll and Hyde game
script. One moment "West and Zampella” were legends in their lunchtime.
Them the pair's “misdeeds formed an unlawful pattern and practice of conduct
that was designed to steal the [Infinity West] studio, which is one of
Activision's most valuable assets -- at the expense of Activision and its
shareholders and for their own personal financial gain."
Activision claimed the publisher was entitled to withhold
all future payments to West and Zampella to recover past payments "during
the period of their disloyalty" and cover compensatory damages.