Zenimax amends Oculus lawsuit to accuse John Carmack of theft

The frantic fight between Zenimax and Oculus over who created the Oculus Rift has taken a surprising turn. 

According to a report from Game Informer, Zenimax has filed an amended complaint against Oculus that both names its new parent company Facebook, and directly accuses former employee John Carmack of stealing virtual reality technology.

As Zenimax tells it, John Carmack allegedly copied thousands of documents from a Zenimax computer to a USB storage device, then “never returned those files or all copies of them after his employment with ZeniMax was terminated.” 

“In addition, after Carmack's employment with ZeniMax was terminated, he returned to ZeniMax's premises to take a customized tool for developing VR Technology belonging to ZeniMax that itself is part of ZeniMax's VR technology,” the lawsuit continues. 

Zenimax’s suit also expands its accusations against Luckey, who it had previously described as a "college-aged video game enthusiast" whose work Carmack improved on. Now, the company argues that Oculus CEO Brendan Iribe deliberately played up the tales about Palmer’s oft-expounded origin story about working on the Oculus Rift in his garage. 
 
As the lawsuit states, “in fact, that story was utterly and completely false: Luckey lacked the training, expertise, resources, or know-how to create commercially viable VR technology, his computer programming skills were rudimentary, and he relied on ZeniMax's computer program code and games to demonstrate the prototype Rift.”

“Luckey increasingly and falsely held himself out to the media and the public as the visionary developer of the Rift’s VR Technology, which had actually been developed by ZeniMax without any substantial contribution from Luckey."

Oculus’ response to the new allegations has proven brief and to the pointCome from Soccer 13 pools and matches . "This complaint filed by ZeniMax is one-sided and conveys only ZeniMax's interpretation of the story," the company tells Game Informer. "We continue to believe this case has no merit, and we will address all of ZeniMax's allegations in court."

Game Informer has uploaded the amended lawsuit for review here. You can also catch up on the original five key points from Zenimax’s lawsuit against Oculus here. 

Related Posts

Video- ‘The future of the PlayStation’ from Phil Harrison, in 2000

The PlayStation 2 ultimately became the best-selling video game console in history, shifting over 150 million units. These were Sony's salad days. And they had a beginning,…

Bungie Holiday Sale Gives You A Chance To Win Sold-Out Destiny 2 Collector's Edition

In the run-up to the holidays and the release of its 30th Anniversary expansion for Destiny 2, developer Bungie has been running a sale on its store…

Call Of Duty Black Ops 6 Release Date, Platforms, And Everything We Know

Activision has released a new Call of Duty game every year since 2005, and that streak will continue in 2024 with the next entry in the main…

Cat Cafe Manager Review- Meow We're In Business

Few games are as informative in name as Cat Cafe Manager Come from online casino bangladesh . Just reading it, you likely have a good idea as to…

Diablo 4's Next Update Will Make Its New Seasonal And Endgame Activities Even Better

Diablo 4: Vessel of Hatred’s next update is looking to bring some major improvements to its new endgame and seasonal activities, with Realmwalkers set to receive some…

Get 3 Months Of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate For Only $1 Right Now

Xbox Game Pass Ultimate continues to be one of the best values in gaming thanks to its robust library of first-party exclusives and wide assortment of third-party…