Thursday, February 29th 2024

Remedy Entertainment Acquires Full Rights to the Control Franchise from 505 Games

Yesterday, Remedy Entertainment Plc ("Remedy") and 505 Games S.p.A. ("505 Games") announce a transaction upon which all publishing, distribution, marketing and other rights to Control, codename Condor, Control 2, and all future Control products will revert to Remedy. The Control franchise is in the core of Remedy. Having acquired the full rights to Control, Condor and Control 2, Remedy is now in a position to make the right product and business decisions focusing on long-term franchise growth.

The transaction has no immediate effect on the income statement, while we see attractive growth opportunities arising in the mid-to-long term. This transaction will enable us to negotiate better deals for current and future Control games. We can now weigh up the options between self-publishing and a new publishing partner for Condor and Control 2. At the same time, we are in a better negotiating position than before as Control is an established brand and Alan Wake 2 has been successful. We are confident that these factors combined will enable us to get the right partner, deal structure and risk-reward profile that benefit Remedy and are the best fit for the Control franchise. We will evaluate and negotiate with potential future partners over the coming months.
Through this transaction we will also get to be more directly in charge of marketing, distribution and other business-to-business deals. This enables further financing and partnership opportunities which will help us to grow the Control 2 and Condor, as well as the whole Control franchise into an even greater success than before.


Remedy's CEO Tero Virtala says: "Ever since we signed up with 505 Games in 2017 to develop and publish Control, we have enjoyed a good partnership in building Control into a successful game that has sold over 4 million units and generated shareable net revenue of approximately EUR 100 million to Remedy and 505 Games. As part of Remedy's long-term strategy to have more ownership over our business and the IPs we have created, we have gotten back all rights for Control and the in-development Condor and Control 2. Having complete ownership over the Control franchise gives us the freedom to decide the best path forward. We will consider our options carefully, knowing that Control is considered an attractive franchise by many partners. Condor and Control 2 have both progressed well in recent months and we expect these projects to reach their next development stages during the first half of 2024. The development of Condor and Control 2 will continue normally when we consider the best publishing, distribution and financing model for these projects."

Tero Virtala continues, "As we amicably part ways, I would like to take this opportunity to thank the 505 Games team for our partnership over the years and for helping to establish Control as a gaming franchise with a lot of future potential."

Remedy rescheduled the Financial Statements Bulletin 2023 due to the negotiations related to this transaction. As announced on February 6, 2024, Remedy will publish its Financial Statements Bulletin 2023 on March 20, 2024.

The key terms of the transaction are as follows:
  • Termination of Agreements: Publishing agreements for Control, codename Condor, and Control 2 are immediately terminated by mutual agreement.
  • Reversion of Rights: For Control 2 and codename Condor, all publishing, distribution, marketing, and other rights licensed to 505 Games revert to Remedy with immediate effect. 505 Games will continue as the publisher of Control through a transition period ending December 31, 2024, under the terms of the original Control publishing agreement. In addition, 505 Games continues to administrate existing B2B deals for Control until their agreed expiration dates. After the transition period and the expiry of these B2B deals, 505 Games will have no future royalty or other rights to Control.
  • Purchase Price and Cash Flow Effect: The maximum purchase price for the transaction is approximately EUR 17 million, which equals the amount that 505 Games has paid for the development of codename Condor and Control 2 to date including a minor premium. Remedy is entitled to set off certain receivables from the purchase price and, therefore, the cash flow effect from the transaction will be clearly less than the purchase price. Remedy will pay the net purchase price in three cash instalments during the next twelve months.
Remedy in brief
Remedy Entertainment Plc is a pioneering, globally renowned video game company founded in 1995 and headquartered in Finland with an office in Stockholm, Sweden. Known for its story-driven and visually stunning action games, Remedy has created multiple successful, critically acclaimed franchises such as Control, Alan Wake and Max Payne. Remedy also develops its own Northlight game engine and tools technology that powers many of its games.
Source: Remedy Games
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5 Comments on Remedy Entertainment Acquires Full Rights to the Control Franchise from 505 Games

#2
gffermari
Good news for the control franchise.
But I don’t see any possibility to get rid of the Microsoft cancer regarding the rights on Quantum Break.

it’s so bad that the publishers keep Remedy from the testxxxes imprisoning any future sequel/add on/whatever that Remedy may want to develop.
Posted on Reply
#3
GerKNG
Awful news... a lot of franchises will be destroyed to be ESG compliant nonsense.
Posted on Reply
#4
gffermari
At least now Remedy has the option to self fund most of the development, if they can, and decide about the platforms to publish.

Alan Wake 2 could not be developed without the Epic’s cash though.
It’s not Assassins creed or COD or whatever where most of the assets are ready from previous or other titles.
Posted on Reply
#5
GodisanAtheist
I've really come to enjoy Remedy's brand of entertainment, reminds me of one of those old school devs we had back in the 90's that really had passion for their work even if it was imperfect, before the big publicly owned corpos got involved and turned a lot of their inhouse devs into franchise mills.

That said I hope whatever they do allows them to keep their games on all storefronts and platforms rather than being EGS exclusive. I'd love to play Alan Wake 2, but likely never will since its locked to EGS. Maybe Remedy will be able to buy out the rights for that game at some point as well and republish everywhere.
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Nov 21st, 2024 11:05 EST change timezone

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