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Rockstar Games calls off remote work, citing leaks in the run-up to releasing the new Grand Theft Auto VI

By
Jason Schreier
Jason Schreier
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Jason Schreier
Jason Schreier
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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February 28, 2024, 7:17 PM ET
illustration of Grand Theft Auto VI game
Rockstar Games is calling employees back to the office five days a week for productivity and security reasons, the company says. CHRIS DELMAS-AFP via Getty Images

Rockstar Games, a division of Take-Two Interactive Software Inc., will ask employees to return to the office five days a week beginning in April as the video-game maker enters the final stages of development on its next game, the hotly anticipatedGrand Theft Auto VI.

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In an email to staff on Wednesday reviewed by Bloomberg, Rockstar Head of Publishing Jenn Kolbe said the decision was made for productivity and security reasons. The company has faced several security breaches including a massive dump of early footage from the new Grand Theft Auto and an early trailer that leaked in December.

Kolbe wrote that the company also found “tangible benefits” from in-person work. “Making these changes now puts us in the best position to deliver the next Grand Theft Auto at the level of quality and polish we know it requires, along with a publishing roadmap that matches the scale and ambition of the game,” she wrote.

Return-to-office mandates have been a hot topic across various industries since the pandemic forced myriad employees to work from home. More recently, many employers have asked staff to return to the office for two or three days a week. A study last month found that remote work did not have an impact on productivity.

The issue has been particularly controversial among video-game workers thanks to the volatility of the industry and its lack of a centralized workforce. Many of 2023’s biggest video-game hits, such as Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 from Insomniac Games, were developed remotely.

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