Trends in GameDev Venture Capital Deals – legal overview by REVERA law group
- Strengthening control over the use of investment
- Growing focus on sanctions and AML compliance
- Enhancing provider KYC compliance
- Loan grant upon signing of Term Sheet
- Post-closing extension
- Development of stock option plans for employees
- Use of Disclosure Letter
Anna Solovei, Counsel, Head of M&A and Corporate Structuring of Technology Companies Practice, and Viktoryia Semianitskaya, Associate in M&A and Corporate Structuring of Technology Companies Practice, representing REVERA law group, explored the key trends in the gamedev venture capital investment transactions of 2023 to watch out for in 2024.
In 2023, we mainly advised on investment deals in game studios, with fewer exits than in previous years. The largest transactions occurred in the console and PC segment (which aligns with the global gaming industry investment trend), while several deals were in the mobile segment.
Now, let's delve into the key trends.
Strengthening control over the use of investment
Formerly, the use of investment purposes appeared in the founders' and targets' representations and warranties and were often generically described as "for business/product development". Now, in almost every transaction, the purposes are defined and specified narrowly, including:
- permitted expenditure (e.g., development and marketing expenses) and prohibited expenditure (e.g., dividend payments);
- particular product to be developed within the purposes;
- investor's consent requirement for any changes in the purposes (including for cases when one product has failed, but there are other ideas);
- requirement for the company to provide breakdown investment allocation reports.
Furthermore, we often see the liability imposed on the founders and the target company for improper use of the investment. This may take the form of call options* that entitle the investor to buy back shares from the founders and secure a higher stake in the company and instruments that force the target company to redeem the shares from the investor, allowing the investor to recover their funds. Under the second option, the redeemable shares are calculated from the total number of the investor's shares pro rata to the number of misused investments.
Growing focus on sanctions and AML compliance
Checks of the parties to the deal for sanctions and AML compliance occur at several transaction stages. As regulatory requirements have become more stringent, investors have become more willing to protect their investment, and risk-hedging methods have become standard:
- Anti-sanctions and anti-corruption representations and warranties (with target companies and founders providing these both for themselves and their employees, directors and agents);
- Commitments to use investment in compliance with sanctions and anti-corruption laws and liability clauses for breaches thereof;
- AML statements (representations made by the target company to the investor about non-violation of anti-money laundering laws).
Enhancing provider KYC compliance
Against the strengthening banking compliance, we observed deepening KYC checks by service providers (agents offering corporate services to the target company, including the nominee, directorial, and secretarial services). Across jurisdictions, transactions involved extensive KYC checks of investors (with multiple ownership layers – checks on each level up to the UBO), more comprehensive KYC requests compared to previous years, large document packages, and time-consuming reviews.
Loan grant upon signing of Term Sheet
Upon signing the Term Sheet, it is common for investors to provide the target company with a short-term loan (a so-called bridge loan to cover current expenses before the main financing is received). There are interest-bearing and interest-free loans, standard loans repaid by the target company immediately upon receiving the investment, and convertible loans, including those with a discount (with a discount on the share price in the qualified financing round). Such a loan constitutes a part of the investment paid in advance.
Post-closing extension
Post-closing obligations used to be limited to registration procedures (reflection of the investor's entry in the company's corporate documents). Increasingly, other obligations, usually related to addressing risks identified in legal due diligence (e.g., IP issues), are now commonly provided for in the post-closing sections. The purpose is to formalize and define deadlines for resolving issues not resolved before the transaction or deliberately left for post-closing to avoid delaying the closing date.
Development of stock option plans for employees
ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan) has become a frequent element of transactions: both standard and phantom option plans, including in unfamiliar forms, such as options on phantom shares in limited liability companies where ownership is expressed by percentage and membership units. If the ESOP is in its initial implementation stage before the transaction (e.g., shares are reserved for the ESOP), investors usually insist on further steps in the financing round. First, the Term Sheet sets out the ESOP arrangements. Secondly, post-closing commitments include establishing an option program within a specific timeframe.
Use of Disclosure Letter
Inaccurate representations and warranties from the transaction documents are usually either disclosed in the text of the representations via disclaimers, exceptions, and wording adjustments or by preparing a Disclosure Letter, whereby the representations are not modified, but inconsistencies are disclosed separately. In recent transactions, we see a trend towards using the second option (usually at the investor's request). Moreover, this tool is common both for transactions contemplated by standardized documents, which provide for the completion of the Disclosure Schedule form (for example, the BVCA templates – documents of the British Venture Capital Association), and in general, in any transactions with "own" customized draft documents.
The above trends appeared in variations in almost all gamedev transactions in 2023. In our view, they will remain valid in 2024. We assume that the features of the 2023 transactions, which were slightly less frequent, may also be relevant and become trends in 2024: for instance, tools to control the involvement of founders in the business (reverse vesting, call options to buy out shares from founders in case of their insufficient involvement).
We recommend keeping an eye on trends while preparing for investment rounds and wish you successful deals in 2024.
[1] Target company is a company that is the subject of an attempted deal.
[7] Term Sheet is a non–binding document outlining the basic terms of a future transaction.
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