Possibility Space Owners Sue NetEase for $900M

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Okay, buckle up, because the gaming world’s serving up some spicy drama again. You’ve probably heard of Possibility Space—that studio that went belly-up in 2024 under some seriously weird circumstances. Well, now its owners, Jeff and Annie Strain, are throwing a $900 million lawsuit at NetEase, claiming the big Chinese publisher tanked their whole operation with “false and defamatory rumors” about fraud at another studio they owned, Crop Circle Games. Yeah, it’s a mess, and I’m here to break it down for you like I’m chatting over a late-night Discord call.

So, picture this: Possibility Space shuts down out of nowhere last April after Kotaku’s Ethan Gach starts sniffing around, asking Jeff Strain about Crop Circle Games folding. He’s got some juicy, non-public details—stuff only an insider would know. Jeff freaks, emails his team about a leak, and spills the beans to their mystery publisher. Next thing you know, the publisher’s like, “Nah, we’re not funding this anymore,” and boom—project’s dead, studio’s toast. Then, like dominoes, their other Prytania Media outfits, Fang and Claw and Dawon, bite the dust too. Rough year, right?

Now, the Strains are pointing fingers at NetEase, saying they started the rumor mill churning. According to the lawsuit, filed back in January, NetEase spread word that Crop Circle Games was cooking the books—pure fraud vibes—to scare off investors and kneecap Prytania Media. Why? Allegedly, the Strains were poking at NetEase’s sketchy compliance with U.S. foreign investment rules. With NetEase tied to the Chinese government, that’s a big no-no stateside, and the suit claims they didn’t want to fess up to the Committee on Foreign Investment about their CCP connections. Instead, they supposedly pushed Prytania to dodge regs by setting up shop in Canada or Ireland. Shady much?

Here’s where it gets wilder. The suit says NetEase’s bigwigs—like CEO Ding Lei, who snagged a $29 million pad from Elon Musk—were trying to bounce from China to the U.S. and didn’t want the spotlight on their Western cash flow. Annie Strain offered to help sort out compliance, but NetEase kept brushing her off. Then, bam, February 2024 rolls around, and Jeff hears these fraud whispers about Crop Circle. A NetEase guy on the board, Han Chenglin, allegedly cops to it—they started the rumors. Investors bolt, funding dries up, and Prytania’s $344 million empire crumbles to zilch.

NetEase, though? They’re not sweating it. In a statement to Polygon, they called the whole thing “wholly without merit” and promised to fight tooth and nail. Meanwhile, I dug up Annie’s old open letter about Crop Circle’s closure (thanks, Wayback Machine), where she blamed it on a game that just didn’t vibe with today’s players. No mention of NetEase back then—makes you wonder what shifted.

As a gamer who’s seen studios rise and fall, this feels personal. I’ve sunk hours into titles from devs who’ve had to shutter—sucks every time. Was NetEase playing dirty to cover their tracks, or did Prytania just fumble the bag? That $900 million ask is triple their old valuation, so the Strains aren’t messing around. Either way, this lawsuit’s peeling back the curtain on some ugly industry underbelly stuff—leaks, rumors, and big money games.

So, what’s your take? Think NetEase orchestrated a takedown, or is this the Strains grasping at straws after a bad run? One thing’s for sure—this Possibility Space saga’s got more twists than a speedrunner’s glitch tech. Keep an eye on it, because the fallout’s gonna be wild.

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Possibility Space
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Studio closures 2024