Quantic Dream responds to Paris Court of Appeals judgement to "set the record straight"

"These accusations seriously damaged the honour and reputation of the studio." 

Quantic Dream, developer of PlayStation exclusives Heavy Rain and Detroit: Become Human, has posted a new statement stating an investigation has concluded there was no "'toxic atmosphere' or any kind of discrimination in the studio" in order to "set the record straight".

The statement comes after the studio was accused of a hostile work environment and sued by a former employee back in 2018. The victim in the case quit their post due to offensive photoshopped images of employees being circulated at the studio, images of which came to light after a damning joint investigation into toxic workplace culture was undertaken by a team of journalists at French publications Le Monde, Canard PC, and Mediapart.

At the time, Quantic Dream boss David Cage said he was "shocked" by the allegations, and in a statement published to the studio's Twitter account, Quantic Dream branded the claims by its own staff as "slanderous" and part of a "smear campaign", and then sued the publications.

"In January 2018, the three articles published in the French press made extremely serious accusations against Quantic Dream, claiming, in particular, a "toxic" corporate culture, characterised by "misogynistic", "sexist", "homophobic" and "racist"behaviours, as well as alleged financial malpractice and supposed "liberties taken with labour laws"," the studio says in a new statement published on the official blog earlier this week (thanks, PC Gamer).

"These accusations, formally denied by the company, its managers, its Staff Representatives, and its employees, and contradicted by the reality of objectively verifiable facts, seriously damaged the honour and reputation of the studio."

It goes on to say that on 7th April 2021, the Paris Court of Appeals "issued a new court decision, which once again very clearly establishes the facts and responsibilities in this case, by dismissing the plaintiff's claims in their entirety".

Quantic Dream added that "these objective, factual and verifiable elements, confirmed by the competent judicial or administrative institutions, show indisputably that the allegations contained in these articles were untrue and likely to damage the studio's honour and reputation".

The studio also posits it was the victim of an organised attack "aimed at deliberately tarnishing the studio's image".

"More than 10,000 tweets were sent in a few days by a single account on Twitter, with the aim of getting the allegations against the company to the top of the search engines," it says. "There is evidence that a very small number of people are behind these actions, which are aimed at deliberately tarnishing the studio's image and damaging its team."

"Quantic Dream reaffirms once again the values that the studio has always defended in its games and within the company, which are values of humanism, inclusiveness, and the right for individuals to express themselves uniquely. We will continue to defend them with the same passion and determination as always," the statement concludes.

"Quantic Dream remains firmly committed to continuing to work with its employees to create a serene work environment conducive to the professional and personal development and fulfilment of everyone."

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Vikki Blake

Vikki Blake

Contributor  |  _vixx

When​ ​her friends​ ​were falling in love with soap stars, Vikki was falling in love with​ ​video games. She's a survival horror survivalist​ ​with a penchant for​ ​Yorkshire Tea, men dressed up as doctors and sweary words. She struggles to juggle a fair-to-middling Destiny/Halo addiction​ ​and her kill/death ratio is terrible.