According to a joint statement, “Gearbox Software, 3D Realms and Interceptor Entertainment have resolved their differences; the parties have voluntarily ended all litigation between them,” and, “Gearbox Software…wishes to keep the terms of its settlement confidential except to confirm that Gearbox Software is the full and rightful owner of the Duke Nukem franchise.”
Which is all very tidy and polite. But I like to think that the terms of this confidential settlement at one point involved something a bit more like this:
Randy Pitchford (Gearbox): I want to hear you say it.
Mike Nielsen (3D Realms): This is too far, Randy. It’s too far. Don’t you have a soul left in your body
Pitchford: Say it, Mike. Say it to me. This is what we agreed on.
Nielsen [Crying]: Hail…hail to the king, baby.
And then Randy Pitchford donned a Burger King crown, somehow rolled the rights to Duke Nukem into a cigar, and smoked it. While flexing.
Did it happen I guess we’ll never know.
Either way, this means Gearbox is open to making new Duke Nukem games. The statements from both 3D Realms and Interceptor say, “And as big Duke fans, we’re excited to see what Gearbox has in store for the King,” which…well, excited isn’t the word I’d use. After the sin-against-humanity that was Duke Nukem Forever, I’d be pretty okay with the Duke resting in peace. But there’s a feeling in my gut that Gearbox has other plans.
It also means the Interceptor/3D Realms Duke Nukem Mass Destruction project (the one that kicked off this lawsuit to begin with) is dead forever—which isn’t too big a deal, considering they’ve already turned the bones of the game into Bombshell. That game’s scheduled to release sometime this year.