Compromised accounts tied to No Man’s Sky developer Hello Games led to a series of faked official statements today calling the ambitious space exploration game “a mistake.”
Two sources close to the development of the game indicated to Kotaku that that “mistake” tweet and subsequent e-mails sent purportedly to press by Hello Games chief Sean Murray were the result of a hack.
It started with a tweet posted to the official Hello Games Twitter account this morning around 8:48 AM Eastern. “No Man’s Sky was a mistake.”
Suspecting the account was hacked or otherwise compromised, Kotaku reached out to Murray at Hello Games via an email we’d communicated through in the past around 9:30 AM. We asked whether the Twitter account had been hacked. The response we got was: “No, the tweet was not a hack, but rather a disgruntled employee. The email that we sent however was official.”
Forbes and Mashable, who both reported on this this morning, both say they were also told by someone using Sean Murray’s e-mail that the “mistake” tweet was from “a disgruntled employee.” It’s unclear if those e-mails were legit. We had been given the same line, but when we followed up it became harder to believe this was really Sean Murray e-mailing us. [UPDATE - 12:50pm - Due to an editing mistake, we stated that the e-mail to Forbes was from a Sean Murray account. It was from a Hello Games e-mail account that Sean Murray has used in the past. Based on a screenshot in an update to the Forbes article, it appears to be the same e-mail address we’d been communicating with.]
We were curious about the e-mailer’s reference to an “official” e-mail. Having received no other email from Hello Games this morning, we asked the person e-mailing us to send the e-mail they were referring to. At 9:53 AM we received the following response, forwarded from a different Hello Games email account bearing Sean Murray’s name. The statement was originally time stamped 7:55 AM. We believe this e-mail that we were sent is also fake:
No Man’s Sky was a mistake.
I have contacted you because the silence from Hello Games has been unwarranted and unprofessional. The community has asked me to speak up, and I have a confession to make. The game was simply unfinished upon arrival. Our hand was forced by not only Sony, but the community as well. The constant harassment and absolute gross misconduct on the community’s part has made it hard to fulfill our artistic vision, while the pressure from Sony to release the game as soon as possible forced us to cut key features. I want to apologize for what we did not deliver on, as the game does not meet up to what our artistic vision was.
However, we do wish that the community was more understanding of our situation. Many people have asked for refunds despite our promise to continually improve and update No Man’s Sky. We are just a small studio that has poured our blood, sweat, and tears into this project. The complete lack of respect when it comes to the work we have done absolutely saddens not only myself, but the team as well. We want to improve the game to the point we dreamed of it being and beyond.
I hope everyone affected understands,
Sean Murray
The information given to us via email exchanges didn’t line up with that given to Polygon, who were told by someone identifying themselves as Sean Murray that the original tweet was posted by Sean himself but removed by an employee.
As it turns out, the original “mistake” Tweet was sent through Sean Murray’s LinkedIn account, suggesting that the business networking service may have been the source of the original breach.
Later this morning, Sean Murray’s account tweeted:
No Man’s Sky was released in August of this year following multiple delays, having built up a tremendous amount of hype since the first teaser trailer debuted in 2013. Many of the features demonstrated or suggested during the game’s development period did not make it into the final build, and many feel the final product was rushed to market unfinished.
The hacked message was the first tweet posted to the Hello Games Twitter account since September 23. It’s quite possible that someone frustrated over the developer’s silence acted out.
We will continue to follow this story as it develops.
Update 11:32 AM: Hello Games’ Twitter responded to a tweet from Sean Murray asking if they were still hacked with the following:
So either everything’s fine, or everything’s still hacked and we’ll never know what’s real or fake ever again.