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Report: Ex-Annapurna Interactive staff taking charge Take-Two's Private Division label

The unannounced studio is reportedly now in charge of games from the former label, including the Kerbal Space Program franchise and Game Freak's mysterious new project.

Justin Carter, Contributing Editor

January 7, 2025

2 Min Read
Logo for indie game label Private Division.
Image via Private Division.

At a Glance

  • Both Annapurna Interactive and Private Division had an eventful 2024, and now staff from both will come together.

Private Division, the indie game label from Take-Two, has been reportedly acquired by staff from last year's mass exodus at Annapurna Interactive.

Per Bloomberg, the new, still-unnamed studio will inherit games and franchises previously published under the Private Division banner. The titles that will fall under this new developer's purview include the Kerbal Space Program series, and an unannounced project from Pokémon developer Game Freak.

Last November, it was reported Take-Two had sold the label to a then-unknown company. According to Bloomberg, the buyer was the Austin-based private equity firm Haveli, which reportedly struck a deal to fund the Annapurna alums' studio. As a result of this purchase, some of the near-20 Private Division staffers will be laid off.

What happened with Private Division and Annapurna Interactive

Last summer, the Grand Theft Auto publisher planned to either close (or shut down) Private Division. That was preceded by the full closure of Roll7 (Rollerdrome, OlliOlli) and layoffs at Kerbal creator Intercept Games. Yellow Brick Games and Bloober Team, two developers whose projects were to be published by Private Division, respectively switched to self-publishing or had their deal with the label fully dissolved.

Over at Annapurna Interactive, an alleged power struggle primarily between studio leadership led to a resignation wave among staff. Among its many issues, the video game division of the popular film studio was reportedly set to launch its own offshoot called Verset, which would handle current and future Annapurna Interactive deals, and indie work of its own.

Instead, discussions between Verset's planned leaders, James Masi and Nathan Gary, and Interactive co-founder Megan Ellison hit a standstill. Despite attempted negotiations, the 25-person Interactive staff all departed. The reported plan at the time for the staff was to launch its own publisher. What remains of Annapurna Interactive began hiring staff so it could make good on pre-existing deals.

Bloomberg's full report on Private Division's new situation can be read here.

About the Author

Justin Carter

Contributing Editor, GameDeveloper.com

A Kansas City, MO native, Justin Carter has written for numerous sites including IGN, Polygon, and SyFy Wire. In addition to Game Developer, his writing can be found at io9 over on Gizmodo. Don't ask him about how much gum he's had, because the answer will be more than he's willing to admit.

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