A new Valve documentary reveals how a Korean-speaking intern named Andrew helped save the company during a critical legal battle in 2002. The story emerged during Half-Life 2’s 20th anniversary celebrations.
The crisis began when Valve sued Sierra Entertainment (owned by Vivendi) over Counter-Strike licensing to cyber cafes. Vivendi responded aggressively, overwhelming Valve with legal documents, many in Korean, pushing the company toward bankruptcy.
Andrew, a UCLA Korean language studies major doing a summer internship at Valve’s legal department, discovered crucial evidence in the Korean documents. He found proof that Vivendi was destroying case-related evidence, turning the lawsuit in Valve’s favor.
The victory allowed Valve to retain rights to Half-Life and Counter-Strike, leading to the creation of Steam. This platform would transform PC gaming distribution.
The case’s outcome prevented Valve’s bankruptcy, with founder Gabe Newell nearly selling his house during the legal battle.
The documentary also revealed previously unseen content from Half-Life 2: Episode 3. Andrew’s full identity remains unknown, though internet researchers are working to locate him.