Valve Facing UK Lawsuit Over Music Rights in Games Valve Doesn’t Make or Own



UK-based collective rights management organisation PRS for Music has “commenced legal proceedings” against Valve over the use of music in PC games sold and distributed via Steam, reports GamesIndustry.biz.

PRS for Music claims that Valve has “never obtained a licence for its use of the rights managed by PRS on behalf of its members, comprising songwriters, composers, and music publishers” since Steam was established.

“The litigation will progress unless Valve Corporation engages positively with discussions and takes the necessary license to cover the use of PRS repertoire, both retrospectively and moving forwards,” said the organisation in a press statement that namechecked “high profile series” such as Forza Horizon, FIFA/EA FC, and Grand Theft Auto (none of which are published by Valve, but rather Microsoft, EA, and Rockstar, respectively).

In the UK, however, licensing music for video games (that is, what happens when a developer or publisher negotiates a deal to place a particular song in their game) is a separate element of the copyright to what occurs when the game is subsequently downloaded or streamed by a player. PRC website documentation indicates that storefronts like Xbox use the same “General Entertainment Online Licence” that covers non-broadcast streamers like Prime Video, Disney+, and Netflix, and notes previous deals with Sony Computer Entertainment Europe for the use of copyrighted music within games and games-related content downloaded across Europe.

This is the latest in a string of legal hurdles for Valve. In January 2026, a UK tribunal gave the go-ahead to a £656 million ($901 million) collective action lawsuit targeting Valve over alleged anti-competitive practices on PC storefront Steam. On top of this, last month the attorney general of New York Letitia James announced she is suing Valve, alleging the platform illegally promotes gambling to children.

The PRS for Music made headlines back in 2009 for pouncing on a woman who played classical radio to her horses to keep them calm without paying for a public performance licence, and for threatening large fines against a shop assistant who it accused of singing to herself without a performance licence while she stacked shelves, which it subsequently apologised for.

Luke is a Senior Editor on the IGN reviews team. You can track him down on Bluesky @mrlukereilly to ask him things about stuff.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Jurassic Park, parkour and Five Nights At Freddy’s meet in Terrible Lizards, in which you must go faster

    “Jurassic parkour!” I bellowed to myself in pure delight, when first I read the trailer blurb for Terrible Lizards, announced yesterday. I can only applaud the immense willpower required…

    3 months after revealing his debut project at The Game Awards, Yakuza creator Toshihiro Nagoshi loses NetEase funding for his studio

    Just three months after the world premier trailer for Nagoshi Studio’s upcoming Gang of Dragon was revealed at the 2025 Game Awards, a Bloomberg report (via GamesIndustry) says NetEase has…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Arshdeep Singh fined, handed demerit point for incident with Daryl Mitchell

    WATCH: Tornado threat from Texas to Great Lakes

    WATCH:  Tornado threat from Texas to Great Lakes

    Shots fired at U.S. Consulate in Toronto

    Shots fired at U.S. Consulate in Toronto

    Mary-Kate Olsen’s Chic Sandals Aren’t The Row—They’re £40 Sandals on Amazon

    Mary-Kate Olsen’s Chic Sandals Aren’t The Row—They’re £40 Sandals on Amazon

    Advantageous Selection – Marginal REVOLUTION

    Advantageous Selection – Marginal REVOLUTION

    FAA opens up real world testing for air taxi startups

    FAA opens up real world testing for air taxi startups