Blog

Production Insight: STUDIO CLOSURE: SAFEGUARDING GAME IP FUTURE

14.07.2025
Production Insight: STUDIO CLOSURE: SAFEGUARDING GAME IP FUTURE - Walla Walla Studio

Cover Image

Safeguard Your Game IP After Studio Shutdown

When the Credits Roll: Managing IP Beyond Studio Life

Amid a volatile games market, even acclaimed studios can face closure. Yet as the doors close, the true challenge begins: ensuring your game’s intellectual property (IP) remains valuable, accessible, and respected in the years to come. Studios that think ahead not only protect their reputations but also keep their worlds alive for future players.

The Problem: Disbanding, Disarray, and Forgotten Franchises

With team members dispersing and priorities shifting, assets and source code can become fragmented or lost. This jeopardizes everything from bug fixes and player support to opportunities for remasters, sequels, or licensing. For example, the classic game No One Lives Forever has languished in legal and technical limbo for years, with its rights holders unable to re-release or license the IP due to poor documentation and unclear ownership. Conversely, studios like Double Fine have won praise by meticulously archiving assets, enabling beloved remasters such as Grim Fandango Remastered.

Beyond asset loss, poor communication during closure can damage studio reputation. Disappointed fans left in the dark, or buyers facing unsupported software, can erode brand value. For IP owners, opaque or missing records complicate deals with publishers, discouraging potential remaster or licensing partners.

Actionable Steps: Secure Your IP’s Future

  1. Centralize All Assets and Code
    Gather all digital assets, source code, documentation, and build tools in a single, secure, organized storage system. Cloud repositories or well-labeled hard drives are a must. Don’t forget localization files, promotional art, and even old bug trackers.
  2. Document Everything
    Produce clear documentation covering code architecture, publishing agreements, middleware licenses, asset attributions, and build processes. Annotate any dependencies or proprietary tech that may affect future porting or support.
  3. Formalize Asset Handoffs
    Ensure legal transfer of asset ownership—or custodianship—to trusted individuals, companies, or a designated IP holding entity. Draft clear agreements outlining obligations for ongoing support, maintenance, or future adaptation.
  4. Communicate With Stakeholders
    Inform players, partners, and licensors about the closure timeline, future support plans, and how the IP will be maintained. Transparency preserves goodwill and protects your team’s legacy.
  5. Evaluate Licensing or Remastering Options
    Proactively identify parties interested in licensing, remastering, or supporting your IP. Package documentation and assets to make it easy for external developers or rights holders to pick up where you left off.

Pro Tip: Future-Proof With Modular Builds

Before winding down, create stable, modular builds of your game. Think of it as preservation insurance—complete builds with well-defined APIs and minimal dependencies make future adaptation, porting, or support far more feasible, even years later. Store these builds in redundant locations, and consider partnering with digital preservation organizations or trusted third-parties for long-term storage.

Conclusion: Turn Endings Into New Beginnings

Managing IP effectively after studio closure requires more than last-minute file dumps. With clear processes and transparent communication, you transform a painful transition into a legacy safeguard—opening the door to remasters, licensing, or fan-led initiatives that keep your creation alive.

What’s your studio’s plan for preserving game IP? Share your strategies and lessons learned in the comments below—your experience could help others save a classic!

    Let’s talk

    Just enter your details and we will reply within 24 hours

    Parallax - Walla Walla Studio