You may be aware that there has been escalating speculation on some news sites that Rupert Murdoch’s NewsCorp was poised to buy Eidos. The news stemmed from self-styled games industry oracle GamesIndustry.biz, which claimed that “Although the exact progress of the negotiations over Eidos' future are shrouded in secrecy, multiple UK industry sources have this morning told [us] that they believe a deal is imminent - and that Murdoch's media empire is the buyer.”
The site then went on record with a piece entitled, “Eidos insiders confirm News Corp deal is imminent.” It must be stressed that both pieces were heavily edited after going to press. The piece had insider quotes reading, "We're just really glad the News Corp thing is out in the open now. Keep an eye on it over the next week. It could happen on Thursday, it could happen on Monday - we're not sure, but there's light at the end of the tunnel now."
The site when on, “"Everyone within Eidos knows that when it gets sold, it's going to be sold as a group with a new flag on it," our source confirmed this morning. "It's not going to be broken up in the same way Criterion was."”
Amazingly, if predictably, the whole story is completely bogus. Not only that, but the author of the stories never even bothered to contact Eidos or NewsCorp. As an Eidos executive put it to SPOnG today, “We read this and were astounded. We had no contact from the journalist who wrote the story and we are still laughing about what we read.” It would seem that Eidos especially liked the section in which the site claimed, “…tell-tale signs at the firm's offices - specifically a hiring freeze across the company, and reports that development studios have been told to prepare presentations on each of their projects for the new owners.”
Speaking exclusively to SPOnG this afternoon, NewsCorp’s New York office sought to slam the false buyout rumours. “Okay, so whoever it was who ran this piece never called us to ask about it. Not once. I thought that’s what journalists are supposed to do. Isn’t it? Furthermore, he didn’t even call us after the event. To this day we have never had any contact. So to put a piece to press confirming such a deal amazed me and my colleagues. I’d be interested to know if the so called source for any such ‘news’ had been trading Eidos shares,” a dark and cynical shadow to cast across games news reporting.
“It’s total horseshit. We’ve been laughing about it internally for the past few days," our NewsCorp contact continued. "In fact, the funniest thing is, we’ve never held any kind of talks with Eidos. It’s so far off the mark as to be the kind of piece that leads us to believe that something is wrong in games reporting.”
Indeed, taking a cue from the self-agrandising domain name the site goes under, many other sites took its word as gospel and perpetuated the rumour without sparing a moment to consider the story's authenticity.