Workers at Grand Theft Auto developer Rockstar Games have gone public with the Rockstar Game Workers Union, the studio's first-ever labour union. The union covers staff across all five of Rockstar's UK offices in Edinburgh, London, Leeds, Lincoln and Dundee, and operates as a subsidiary of the Independent Workers' Union of Great Britain (IWGB).
The union announced itself with a video cheekily titled "The video GTA fans have been waiting for" — a jab at the years-long wait for a new GTA 6 trailer. Instead of game footage, it recaps the past several months: the firing of 31 employees, protests outside studios, and the legal fight that followed.
A firing that backfired on Rockstar
Rockstar dismissed 31 workers in October 2025, claiming they leaked "specific game features from upcoming and unannounced titles" in a public forum. The fired employees told a different story, saying they were targeted for trying to organise. The IWGB called it the most blatant act of union busting in games industry history. Far from killing the effort, the firings supercharged it. "Rockstar's sudden firings didn't crush our union. Instead we are now bigger and stronger than ever," the announcement video states.
Why the union is going public now
The group is rallying around pay transparency, flexible working and an end to crunch. The more urgent goal is raising money for its legal case. The fired workers were denied interim relief by a UK employment tribunal earlier this year, and a final court hearing date has now reportedly been set. The union has set up a support fund to cover its legal defence and campaign costs.
The timing is pointed. GTA 6 lands on consoles November 19, and parent company Take-Two expects revenues above $8 billion in fiscal 2027 on the back of it.