The saga of a now infamous Starfield leaker has ended up with a 29-year-old man booked on a felony charge after allegedly trying to sell stolen copies of the game online prior to its September 1 release date.
Darin Harris was processed by the Shelby County, Tennessee Sheriffâs Office on August 24, roughly four days after he originally posted the first 45 minutes of Starfield online. The information on the Sheriff Officeâs website lists a felony charge for $2,500-$10,000 worth of stolen property, a misdemeanor charge for $1,000 or less of stolen property, and a misdemeanor charge for possession of marijuana.
Harris could not immediately be reached for comment. Bethesda and Microsoft did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Unboxing + Gameplay video is online #Starfield
Get it while you can. https://t.co/CHVglRo1iU
â old Visceral (@zVisceral_) August 22, 2023
The leak of the highly anticipated open-world sci-fi RPG went viral on August 22, with the grainy cellphone footage getting re-posted to various social media sites even after it was taken down from YouTube for copyright infringement. A 60-second clip on Imgur was viewed over 1 million times. Something that immediately jumped out to viewers about the video was that Harris didnât seem to have any idea what he was doing, or much familiarity with Bethesdaâs RPGs in particular, or modern shooters in general. In the aftermath, Harris shared another video online commenting on the initial leak.
âTodd, no offense man, thatâs a good game,â he said, referencing Starfield game director Todd Howard. âThey were saying I play like a beginner cause Iâm not a game expert I was just trying something out. Thatâs a good game yâall donât want to miss it.â
First #Review #Gameplay of #Starfield is here no offense @Todd_Howard_BE pic.twitter.com/DoEp6lPyhi
â Ashenslinky (@ashenslinky) August 22, 2023
Things then took a turn as Harris began uploading listings for additional copies of the game, including the coveted Constellation Edition complete with a custom-made NASA-punk space watch, to the Japanese e-commerce platform Mercari. A few of them now show as sold for roughly their retail price, including one listing that reads âRESERVED for ChrisâŒïž Starfield Xbox Series X/S Bundle.â The account included hundreds of listings for other merchandise as well.
Subsequent videos posted by Harris seemingly showed him going to FedEx to pay for shipping of copies that successfully sold. Fans of the game and major leaks more generally suggested it was a scam. After all, how could he have gotten access to so many copies early? One video then showed him putting labels on packages with a pile of Starfield copies in the seat next to him.

âYâall thought Iâd be out here putting stuff on the internet and it ainât real, nah baby that ainât how we do it, that ainât how we do that,â he said. âYâall used to playing with little boys.â
Around August 24, Harris began clearing out his social media accounts, including deleting all of the videos on his apparent YouTube channel. By then it may have already been too late. Itâs unclear if Bethesda, which made and publishes Starfield, or Microsoft, which owns Bethesda, tipped local authorities off to an alleged misdeed. Harris may also have been booked for completely separate charges unrelated to his unusual social media campaign around the game.
Update 8/28/2023 9:14 a.m. ET: Harris was released from jail on August 25 after a bail of $10,000 was posted, and his next court date is September 8, just a couple days after Starfieldâs full release.
Update 8/28/2023 11:24 a.m. ET: According to a police report obtained by Polygon, Harris is accused of stealing 67 copies of the game, which he claims he legally purchased, from the Vantiva logistics warehouse.
The Memphis Commercial Appeal reports that police executed a search warrant on Harrisâ home where they found a FexEx package with a copy of Starfield inside as well as three handguns, including one that was allegedly stolen.
Microsoft and Bethesda have not responded to requests for comment on whether they helped initiate the investigation.
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