The law firm of Brower Piven, stationed in Maryland, this week presented a request for class action grievance by Electronic Arts for Battlefield 4. This is the third case filed in the span of the last month, for another 2 firms are investigating the distributor.
None of the above processes have a lead plaintiff, speak only of the first procedures and inquiries, and in the case of Brower Piven, the exact reasons are unknown, but judging by the other 2 processes, it is reasonable to think Brower Piven who accuse EA of hiding information on the problems of Battlefield 4 which led to several shareholders to lose money.
That said, this week it came to light that suggests documentation suspicious sale of assets by EA executives while before the problems came to light shooter and actions are devalued.
In short, firms suspect that EA executives were stored negative details about aBattlefield 4 to take time to sell their shares at a good price, then reveal the truth and let the rest of the investors received the greatest impact, however for now this is all speculation.
An EA spokesman said this week that all the allegations were living and he was confident that the legal balance inclined his side.
The truth is that Battlefield 4 has been a headache for both EA to DICE, the developer studio, because the game had and still has several problems that hinder the experience and, consequently, sales.