In 2020, Rockstar Games underwent a rather large shift when co-founder and longtime production executive Dan Houser left the company. Now focusing on his own work as opposed to huge sandboxes like Red Dead Redemption 2 and Grand Theft Auto 5, he’s opened up on why exactly he decided to leave the studio he helped build.
“The scale of the last couple [GTA 5 and Red Dead Redemption 2] were beyond any imagining,” he tells BBC Radio 4. “I worked with incredibly talented people so thinking that group, me piggybacking off their vast brains, could do something amazing – that’s why I worked there.”
Leading development on games the size of what Rockstar produces “swallows all of your time for many years at a time,” he adds. “I don’t know if I had another one of those games in me.”
Given he’s credited on almost every Rockstar game yet, Houser gave plenty of his life to the disparate teams there. These days, his focus has shifted to a new novel, A Better Paradise, coming early 2026, as part of Absurd Ventures, his studio for creating a franchise based on his own universe of characters.
The intent is for a multimedia approach, including animation, live-action, books, comics and, yes, a video game. It’s taken GTA 6 over a decade and counting to reach us – let’s see how long Houser can ship something otherwise.
GTA 6 developer Rockstar is “a machine” in “an industry rife with work exploitation, unfair practice, and unreasonable working conditions,” protesters say after recent firings

