Grand Theft Auto studio accused of 'union busting' after sacking workers

6 hours ago 21

Liv McMahon and

Chris Vallance,Technology reporters

Getty Images The logo for Rockstar Games is displayed on a smartphone screen, with the logo for the upcoming game Grand Theft Auto VI shown on a backdrop behind it.Getty Images

Grand Theft Auto (GTA) maker Rockstar Games has been accused by a trade union of sacking staff in the UK to stop them from unionising.

The Independent Workers' Union of Great Britain (IWGB), which represents people working in the gaming sector, said 31 workers were fired from Rockstar's UK studios on 30 October.

The union led rallies outside the company's offices in Edinburgh and London on Thursday to protest what it described as "the most blatant and ruthless act of union busting in the history of the games industry".

The BBC has approached Rockstar's parent company, Take-Two Interactive, for comment, which has reportedly claimed staff were sacked for sharing confidential information.

"Last week, we took action against a small number of individuals who were found to be distributing and discussing confidential information in a public forum, a violation of our company policies," a Rockstar spokesperson told Bloomberg in a statement.

"This was in no way related to people's right to join a union or engage in union activities."

At large video game studios, information about game development is tightly controlled - with employees often signing agreements not to share confidential information.

Rockstar's upcoming GTA 6 is expected to be one of the best-selling games of all time, with fans clamouring for any news ahead of its May 2026 release date - meaning security around any information will be heightened at the studio.

But union president Alex Marshall accused Rockstar of deflecting from the "real reason" for firing staff - which the IWGB believes is their union involvement.

"They are afraid of hard working staff privately discussing exercising their rights for a fairer workplace and a collective voice," he said.

"Management are showing they don't care about delays to GTA VI, and that they're prioritising union busting by targeting the very people who make the game."

IWGB IWGB members holding a red banner emblazoned with the union's logo are shown picketing outside Take-Two House, the company's London HQ. People are shown holding signs, flags and megaphones as red and yellow smoke rises from smoke grenades.IWGB

Pickets have also taken place outside Take-Two Interactive's UK head office in London.

According to the IWGB, the UK workers fired at the end of October were part of a group discussing forming a union at the company.

Mr Marshall said its only non-Rockstar employees were union organisers.

Speaking to the BBC at a picket outside the Rockstar North office in Edinburgh, organiser Fred Carter said he was standing alongside staff who had been sacked "without warning" and "without reason".

"They've been fired, we believe, because they're union members - which is a protected activity in the UK," he said.

"We're asking people to come out and support us, to demand their jobs back and demand accountability from Rockstar."

After clips from Grand Theft Auto 6 were leaked online following a hack in 2022, Rockstar said it cost the firm $5m (£3.8m) and thousands of hours of staff time to recover.

But Mr Marshall of the IWGB said the company's move to dismiss more than 30 UK workers showed it had "chosen profits over both workers and fans of their games".

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