Summary

Fntastic, the developer behind the notorious and short-lived multiplayer survival extraction shooterThe Day Beforeis taking Russian website Yakutia.Info to court for calling the game a “scam.” The 2023 title, with a fluctuating genre and even more tenuous public perception, was first announced in 2021. Fntastic’s then-upcoming project garnered a lot of excitement thanks to its interesting premise and teaser trailers. For a short while,The Day Beforebecame the most wishlisted game on Steam leading up to its original release date, which was ultimately delayed a few times.

Along with the delays came a rather quick shift in reputation as people began to notice strikingsimilarities betweenThe Day Before’s trailers and those of other gameslikeThe Last of Us, Red Dead Redemption 2, Tom Clancy’s The Division, Call of Duty, and evenCyberpunk 2077.But that marked just the beginning of the debacle, which would result inThe Day Beforegoing down on the negative side of gaming history, with members of the community, including news site Yakutia.Info, labeling the entire project a scam that had “borrowed gameplay mechanics from other games.”

The Day Before game tag page cover art

Despite many panning the extraction shooter, developer Fntastic seems to have taken umbrage with one entity in particularcallingThe Day Beforea scam. According towebsite Yakutia.Info(via 80 Leveland machine translation), its base is in Yakutsk, Russia, the home region of Fntastic’s co-founder brothers, Eduard and Aisen Gotovtsev. The site revealed that it is being sued by the duo for its words in two articles, which have allegedly harmed Fntastic’s reputation.

Fntastic Takes Umbrage with Website’s Description of The Day Before

For its part, Yakutia.Info changed the word “scam” in one article to “embarrassment,” with the explanation that “scam” is relatively new to the Russian language and has a range of meanings, like “failure” and “fraud.” As for the site’s claim thatFntastic had copiedThe Day Before’s gameplay mechanics from other titles, that was a direct quote from a video blog by media outlet IXBT Games, an “authoritative portal” in Russia. Furthermore, Yakutia.Info doubled down on its stance, stating that “the meaning of the articles remained unchanged but became more accurate.”

Despite steps taken by Yakutia.Info to rectify the issue, Fntastic will only settle the case out of court if the website removes the offending articles and apologizes. Instead, the site has decided to fight back against what it deems to be “pressure on freedom of speech.” It refuses to remove the articles and will be countersuing Fntastic. Yakutia.Info also points out that it was not the only site to make such statements about the developer; yet the studio opted to only sue a small company. The article by Yakutia.Info concludes by emphasizing that the Gotovtsev brothers “have remained at the level of amateurs.”

The comments beneath Yakutia.Info’s announcement about the lawsuit largely support the website, with many people speaking out about thecontroversy surroundingThe Day Before,its rocky release, and subsequent abrupt shutdown. Despite a lot of the readers seeming to agree with the assessment that game was a scam, others have pointed out that Fntastic might nevertheless have a case for libel or something similar.