The studio behind the massively successful game World of Tanks walked backtheir controversial actions against one of their former community YouTubers today.
âWe acted too quickly and over the line when we threatened to have YouTube remove SirFochâs video through a copyright infringement complaint,â the company said in a statement. âAnd we are apologizing for that.â Now, Wargaming says they will not take copyright action against âopinions based on our publicly released content.â
Wargamingâs about face follows several days of backlash against the gaming giant. Among the things the company apologized for today was its own prior statement on the matter, which had been supplied to Kotaku and other outlets on Friday.
This dramabegan on Friday following the release of a video by SirFoch, a âfanfluencerâ who posted a critical video tearing down the Chrysler K Grand Finals premium tank and its $80 price tag. In it, SirFoch refers to Wargaming as âgreedy fucks,â adding, âGG Wargaming and fuck you.â Citing his lack of decorum, a Wargaming rep booted SirFoch from the community contributor program and issued a copyright strike. On World of Tanks forums, the gameâs community spoke out against what they perceived to be censorship.
In todayâs statement, Wargaming admitted that they âcould have handled the situation a lot better.â
Wargamingâs previous statement on Friday noted that âWe are more than willing to give members of our community second chances, but there is a level of toxicity and/or offensive language that is unacceptable.â
But, today, the company walked that back, too, possibly buckling to the argument that YouTubeâs copyright system shouldnât be used to police hurtful language or, more specifically, acknowledging that what they said SirFroch said wasnât relevant to the controversial tank video. Wargaming says, that it âinferred that SirFochâs videos contained hate speech and homophobia. While we would obviously not want such content to be associated with any of our games â this video clearly did not. We apologize for this statement, and we donât stand behind those claims. We love our players and our contributors â and we appreciate their honesty and commitment â we are committed to using this incident to grow and improve.â
The company also noted that âWe strongly support our playersâ, including our Community Contributorsâ, right to speak critically about us and our games.â