Psychological humiliation and sexual harassment: Three former Ubisoft execs on trial in France
Three former top executives from French video game giant Ubisoft – the maker of games like Assassin's Creed and Far Cry - went on trial on Monday.
Serge Hascoët, Thomas "Tommy" François and Guillaume Patrux appeared before the Bobigny criminal court on charges of psychological abuse, sexual harassment and attempted sexual assault.
The trial is due to continue until Friday. During the week, the judges will hear the accounts of six women and three men, as well as accusations made by two trade unions.
The defendants deny all the allegations against them.
The Ubisoft omerta began to break in 2020. Three years prior, a Ubisoft employee tried to report psychological harassment to his superiors. The response? 'You stop talking about this immediately. There's no problem at Ubisoft.'
But then came an in-depth investigation conducted by French publications Libération and Numerama. The examination revealed working conditions plagued by harassment, humiliation and discriminatory comments.
Ubisoft then launched an internal inquiry in 2020 after anonymous testimonies emerged on social media accusing the company of a toxic work culture.
Investigators spoke to dozens of witnesses during the probe, but "many refused to file a complaint for fear of reactions from the video game community.'
Still, the testimonies that poured in painted a damning picture of what went on behind the walls of the Ubisoft studios.
Serge Hascoët, 59, Ubisoft's chief creative officer and second-in-command, who resigned after the allegations, is accused of sexual harassment and bullying. He is also accused of making racist comments. He allegedly told staff that a senior employee was irritating because she did not have enough sex and that he should have sex with her in a meeting room in front of everyone 'to show how to calm her.'
Thomas François, 52, former vice-president of editorial and creative services, is accused of forcing a young employee he had just hired to do a headstand in the open-plan office while wearing a skirt. He is also alleged to have often watched pornographic films in the open-plan office and, at a 2015 office Christmas party, he allegedly tried to kiss a colleague on the mouth as his other colleagues restrained the woman. She said she managed to break free and felt 'traumatised' by the incident.
Former game director Patrux, 41, has been accused of psychological harassment and was dismissed for serious misconduct. He is alleged to have mimed hitting staff, cracked a whip near colleagues' faces and drawn swastikas on a woman's notebook as he sat near her in a meeting.
Other examples which allegedly took place under the complicit or indifferent eye of Ubisoft management include shameful examples of public humiliation. For instance, a young Muslim member of staff allegedly found her screensaver changed to an image of a bacon sandwich, while sandwiches were thrown at her during Ramadan.
Other women alleged to police that sexual comments were made regularly, that they were called 'sluts' and told to wear shorter skirts. One woman who wore a coat with red lining was allegedly told by an executive: 'That's an invitation to rape.'
This week's trial is a pivotal moment for the gaming industry, one hailed by some as a #MeToo moment in the video games "boys club". Indeed, the male-dominated video game publishing industry has been scrutinised for years over its treatment of women and minorities, as well as the way these groups are depicted in games.
However, there are those who feel that this week's trial is not enough.
'This trial could have been exemplary,' according to Marc Rutschlé, union delegate at Solidaires Informatique. He told L'Humanité: 'It wasn't three isolated individuals who created this atmosphere of widespread harassment. Their impunity was organised. There are no defendants and many victims. The whole structural aspect has been evacuated.'
Indeed, Ubisoft is taking great care to keep out of the trial as neither the human resources department, nor any representative of the company as a legal entity or its CEO Yves Guillemot, will be making an appearance in court.
Guillemot allegedly previously referred to some of the accusations as 'generational differences of opinion' and 'creative friction'.
The trial continues in Bobigny until Friday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
2 hours ago
- Business Upturn
OCUFA Challenges Ontario Government's Narrative on Postsecondary Funding Crisis, Welcomes Review with Call for Meaningful Faculty Consultation
TORONTO, ON, June 21, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations (OCUFA) today responded to the announcement by Minister of Colleges, Universities, Research Excellence and Security (MCURES) Nolan Quinn of $55.8 million to expand teaching training seats across Ontario. While OCUFA welcomes any new investment in the postsecondary sector, the organization asserts that the Ontario government is not taking meaningful action to address the deep-seated financial crisis facing Ontario's world-class public universities. Minister Quinn highlighted that the investment would train up to 2,600 new teachers by 2027, prioritizing accelerated programs, French and technological education, and seats in northern, rural, Indigenous, and remote regions. However, when asked on the broader financial challenges confronting the sector, Minister Quinn attributed these issues to 'unilateral decisions' by the federal government regarding international student study permits. 'The financial struggles plaguing Ontario's postsecondary education sector are not a sudden development, nor are they solely a result of federal changes to international student permit caps', stated OCUFA President Nigmendra Narain. 'For decades, Ontario's universities have endured chronic underfunding, consistently ranking dead last in Canada in per-student funding. We are disappointed to see the Ontario Government downplay its own responsibility in supporting this vital sector.' OCUFA is deeply concerned that Ontario's universities are currently grappling with program closures, enrollment pauses, increasing precarity among faculty, and significant challenges in funding the province's most promising talent. The undergraduate programs that produce the students who enter teacher's college are not only underfunded, but are now facing cuts, limiting the academic preparation of teachers. While the $55.8 million for teaching pathways is a positive step, OCUFA emphasizes that these recent commitments only scratch the surface of the sector's needs. To simply reach Canada's national per-student funding average, Ontario requires an immediate investment of at least $2.78 billion, possibly more depending on the impact of declining international student enrolment. Without substantial and ongoing funding commitments, Ontario's position as a world leader in postsecondary education, research, and scholarship will continue to be at jeopardy. OCUFA welcomes the Minister's announcement that his ministry will be reviewing how funding is delivered across the postsecondary sector. 'We sincerely hope for meaningful consultation during this process and that the Ontario Government will ensure the voices of university faculty and academic librarians across the province are not only heard but respected,' said OCUFA Executive Director Jenny Ahn, echoing recommendations made at OCUFA's Funding Our Future: Keeping Universities Public conference in 2023. Founded in 1964, OCUFA represents more than 18,000 professors and academic librarians in 30 faculty associations across Ontario. It is committed to enhancing the quality of higher education in Ontario and recognizing the outstanding contributions of its members towards creating a world-class university system. For more information, please visit the OCUFA website at Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with GlobeNewswire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same. Ahmedabad Plane Crash


American Military News
4 hours ago
- American Military News
European diplomats seek progress with Tehran as Trump considers US action in Iran
This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission. The top diplomats from France, Britain, and Germany are headed to Geneva to meet with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in hopes of finding a diplomatic solution one week into the latest Iran-Israel conflict. With the clock ticking after the White House said US President Donald Trump will make a decision 'within two weeks' on whether to get directly involved in the fighting, the meeting of foreign ministers on June 20 has taken on even greater importance to stop air strikes that have killed civilians on both sides. French President Emmanuel Macron said France, Germany and Britain would put 'a diplomatic solution on the table' in Geneva that would comprise oversight of Iran's ballistics activities and how it finances proxies in the region, a resumption of work by the International Atomic Energy Agency inside Iran to ensure uranium enrichment is stopped, and the release of foreigners currently held by Tehran. 'Iran must show that it is willing to join the platform for negotiations we are putting on the table,' Macron said. Israel has threatened further attacks against Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile assets as the violence showed no signs of easing a week after the Israelis began the air strikes. 'Based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said, reading out a message from Trump on June 19. The Pentagon has in the past acknowledged that it has helped to shoot down Iranian projectiles launched toward Israel, but it has not become involved in offensive operations against Iran. During a press briefing, Leavitt said the US president favored a diplomatic solution with Tehran but that his main goal was to ensure that Iran could not obtain a nuclear weapon. She reiterated Trump's insistence that any agreement would have to prohibit uranium enrichment by Iran and ensure that Tehran was not able to get nuclear arms. Iran has insisted its nuclear program is for civilian purposes and has often rejected a ban on uranium enrichment. 'The president is always interested in a diplomatic solution…he is a peacemaker in chief. He is the peace through strength president. And so, if there's a chance for diplomacy, the president's always going to grab it,' Leavitt said. 'But he's not afraid to use strength as well, I will add,' she told reporters. On his Truth Social platform, Trump rejected a Wall Street Journal report — which cited three people familiar with the matter — that said he had told aides he had approved plans for US forces to join Israel in the attacks on Iran but that he was first waiting to see if Tehran would give up its nuclear program. 'The Wall Street Journal has No Idea what my thoughts are concerning Iran!' Trump wrote. Bloomberg also reported, citing people familiar with the matter, that US officials are preparing for a potential strike on Iran in the next few days, possibly over the weekend. In comments to reporters on June 18, Trump said he was 'not looking to fight' Iran but that he might be forced to conduct such operations to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. 'I'm not looking to fight,' he said. 'But if it's a choice between fighting and [Iran] having a nuclear weapon, you have to do what you have to do.' 'You may have to fight,' he later stated. 'I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm going to do,' Trump told reporters later outside the White House. In a televised interview, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel is 'capable of striking all of Iran's nuclear facilities' but 'all help is welcome.' 'Trump will do what is good for the United States, and I will do what is good for the state of Israel,' Netanyahu said. Much of the speculation about the attacks has turned to Iran's Fordow uranium enrichment facility, which is hidden under a mountain and considered to be out of reach of Israeli weapons but susceptible to US 'bunker-buster' bombs. Israel vowed on June 19 to 'remove' Tehran's nuclear and ballistic missile threat after Iranian air strikes hit a hospital earlier in the day. Israeli military officials said several populated areas inside the country were attacked by Iran on June 19, including the hospital in the southern city of Beersheba. Local media said there was severe damage to one ward of the hospital, with 40 people suffering mainly minor injuries. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), according to the Tasnim news agency associated with the IRGC, said it had targeted an Israeli military and intelligence headquarters near the Soroka medical center — the only Level 1 trauma center in southern Israel — in Beersheba. Israel said it bombed nuclear targets in Iran on June 19, including the Natanz and Isfahan sites. It had said the Busher site, the location of the country's only functioning nuclear power plant, was hit, but later retracted the statement. Early on June 20, the Israeli military issued an evacuation warning for people in the industrial area of the Iranian village of Kolesh Taleshan, saying it planned to hit military infrastructure there. Details were not immediately available. Israel launched the current offensive against Iran on June 13 saying it was necessary to halt Tehran's nuclear program, with rights groups saying more than 600 people have been killed, including civilians. Iran responded by launching drones and missiles into Israel, killing some 24 people, according to Israeli officials. Much of Iran's military and scientific leadership has been killed in air strikes. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on June 19 that there is a 'real risk of escalation' and urged Trump to step back from military action against Iran. Israel and many of its Western allies, including the United States, accuse Iran of seeking to build nuclear weapons. Tehran has vehemently rejected the accusations, saying its atomic program is purely for civilian purposes. The fighting has sparked a massive exodus from Tehran and other cities as thousands jam highways seeking safer surroundings.


New York Post
7 hours ago
- New York Post
Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once rapped about his ‘love' for Hamas teror-funding group ‘Holy Land Five'
Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once voiced his 'love' for the five leaders of a notorious nonprofit convicted of funneling more than $12 million to the terror group Hamas. The former C-list rapper-turned-far-left-pol praised the heads of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development – known as the 'Holy Land Five'– in a shocking 2017 rap track uncovered by the antisemitism-fighting group Canary Mission, and made public in a one-minute video segment released Friday. 'My love to the Holy Land Five. You better look 'em up,' the Queens assemblyman – who performed under the stage name Mr. Cardamom – says in a song called 'Salaam,' which the Queens assemblyman said is about growing up Muslim in New York. Advertisement NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (in middle) appearing a rap video for his song 'Nani' when he went by 'Mr. Cardamom.' Mr. Cardamom/Youtube The five heads of the now-defunct Texas based Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development — Shukri Abu Baker, Mohammad El-Mezain, Ghassan Elashi, Mufid Abdulqader and Abdulrahman Odeh — were all convicted in 2008 by a federal jury of funding Hamas, according to the Canary Mission. 'Mamdani sent his 'love' to convicted Hamas funders,' the Canary Mission video says. 'Let that sink in.' Advertisement The quintet were convicted of supporting terrorism, tax fraud, money laundering and other charges. The sentencing ranged from 15 to 65 years in prison for each. In another part of the track, the Israel-hating Mamdani — who is polling a strong second in nearly all polls heading into Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary behind only ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo — raps, 'No ban. No wall. Build it up. We'll make it fall.' The antisemitism-fighting group responds in the video saying:' No ban, no wall—that's an open door for criminals and chaos.' 'Zohran Mamdani stands with convicted terrorist funders and wants open borders,' the group adds. Advertisement 'This is New York City — not a sanctuary for terrorists. Zohran Mamdani. Unfit. Un-American. Unthinkable.' Curtis Sliwa, a Republican mayoral candidate, said 'it's alarming that a mayoral candidate has a history of praising Hamas.' 'New Yorkers reject hate and extremism, and they should reject any candidate who refuses to do the same,' he added. Reps for Mamdani's campaign did not return messages Saturday.