Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Business
  3. Gaming
  4. News

Halo, Destiny composer Marty O’Donnell wins lawsuit against former employer Bungie

Add as a preferred source on Google

Last year we reported that longtime Bungie composer Marty O’Donnell, who provided the iconic Halo theme as well as much of the score to Destiny, had been “terminated without cause.” The circumstances around the firing were hazy, but following the termination O’Donnell sued both Bungie and its CEO Harold Ryan.

O’Donnell won the lawsuit against Ryan for unpaid wages in July, and on Friday a court-appointed arbitrator ruled that Bungie must give O’Donnell shares in the company he worked with for so long. In addition to providing some closure to the year-long battle between O’Donnell and his former employer, the ruling also brings the issues between the two out into the open.

Recommended Videos

While Destiny was only released in 2014, the contract between Bungie and publisher Activision for a five-part franchise was signed in 2010. O’Donnell was tasked with composing music for “every application” of the franchise, according to VentureBeat. Rather than write music for each game as it was developed, Bungie COO Pete Parsons asked O’Donnell to create all of the music for the franchise at once, a work dubbed Music of the Spheres.

O’Donnell, who is justly proud of this music, which features collaborations with Paul McCartney, wanted to release Music of the Spheres as a standalone release, but Bungie had little interest in this. A further slight arose when Activision supplied its own music for the Destiny E3 2013 trailer. O’Donnell tweeted during the presentation that the music was not his and attempted to keep the trailer from being posted online.

This and further disagreements lead to Ryan suggesting that O’Donnell be fired. He was instead given a negative performance review and told that his behavior was “unacceptable.” While O’Donnell returned to work on music and sound design for Destiny, members of the team said he wasn’t contributing enough, and Ryan again suggested that he be fired. This time O’Donnell was fired, and five months later, Destiny shipped, albeit a year late.

Earlier this year O’Donnell founded his own game studio, Highwire Games, which he can now fully focus on with the lawsuits out of the way. “I’m happy this is over, and I’m ready to move on,” he said in an interview with GamesBeat.

Meanwhile Bungie and its CEO are surely relieved to have things settled with O’Donnell. Destiny: The Taken King, the latest expansion for the massively multiplayer shooter, launches on September 15.

Kris Wouk
Former Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
What Should You Look for in an Online Payment Platform for Your Business?
Text, Computer, Electronics

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with QuickBooks

QuickBooks Payments is usually one of the first names that comes up the moment you search for an online payment platform, right alongside Stripe, Square, PayPal, and half a dozen others all promising the same two things: get paid faster, keep more of what you earn. The names are easy to find. What's harder is knowing which of them actually fits your business, and what you should be checking before you commit to one.

Read more
How can small businesses get paid faster?
Wood, Plywood, Floor

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with QuickBooks

Maria owns a small landscaping business outside Austin. It's Friday morning, payroll is due, one of her commercial mowers needs repairs, and three crews are wrapping up projects across town. The business is busy, but nearly $18,000 from completed jobs is still tied up in unpaid invoices.

Read more
Trump says Intel will make chips for Apple in a major win for U.S. manufacturing
Intel Foundry may have landed its most important customer yet
Logo

Intel’s efforts to rebuild its chipmaking business may have landed its biggest customer yet. U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that Apple has agreed to work with Intel to design and manufacture chips in the United States, a deal that could significantly strengthen Intel’s foundry ambitions.

The announcement does not come out of the blue. Earlier reports indicated that Apple and Intel had been discussing a manufacturing partnership for more than a year and had already begun working together on select chip production projects.

Read more