China carries out execution of man convicted of poisoning gaming tycoon Lin Qi

Xu Yao has been sentenced to death for the murder of Lin Qi, the founder of Yoozoo Games, after poisoning him in December 2020.

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China carries out execution of man convicted of poisoning gaming tycoon Lin Qi

Get you up to speed: China executes man who poisoned gaming tycoon linked to Netflix show | News World

Xu Yao was executed on May 21, 2024, after being convicted of poisoning Lin Qi, the chairman and CEO of Yoozoo Games, in December 2020. The execution was confirmed by Yoozoo Games on the Weibo social media platform.

Xu Yao was convicted and sentenced to death in 2024, following the poisoning of Lin Qi in December 2020 over management disputes at Yoozoo Games. The company confirmed the execution occurred on May 21, with a statement expressing gratitude for the justice served in the case.

Yoozoo Games confirmed Xu Yao’s execution in a statement on Weibo, expressing gratitude that “justice has ultimately been served.” The company noted that the case’s resolution will enable it to focus on future projects, including adaptations of Liu Cixin’s works.

What remains unclear — It is not specified how many other employees were affected by the poisoning incident aside from Mr Lin.

China carries out execution of man convicted of poisoning gaming tycoon Lin Qi

A former executive at Chinese game publisher Yoozoo Interactive Co. Ltd. has been sentenced to death for murdering the company?s chairman and chief executive, Lin Qi, a court announced Friday. Xu Yao, 43, who joined Yoozoo in 2017 and got involved in managing film projects related to best-selling Chinese book ?The Three-Body Problem,? poisoned Lin on Dec. 14 and Dec. 15, 2020, leading to his death, after conflicting with the latter over management issues, the Shanghai First Intermediate People?s Court said. Image from https://www.caixinglobal.com/2024-03-22/former-yoozoo-executive-sentenced-to-death-for-fatally-poisoning-chairman-102178384.html
Xu Yao was found guilty of killing Lin Qi (Picture: Wire)

China has executed a man who poisoned a billionaire gaming tycoon linked to a popular Netflix show.

Xu Yao was found guilty of killing Lin Qi, the founder of the Shanghai-based Yoozoo Games.

Yoozoo Games holds the film adaptation rights for the science-fiction trilogy known by the title of its first book, The Three-Body Problem.

The sci-fi trilogy, by Chinese author Liu Cixin, has been translated into more than 40 languages and adapted into television and game productions, including Netflix’s popular 3 Body Problem series released in 2024.

Xu, the former head of a subsidiary of Yoozoo Games, poisoned Mr Lin in December 2020 over being sidelined by the founder shortly after Xu helped his superior land the Netflix deal, local media reported.

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Xu was convicted in 2024 and executed on May 21, according to local media reports. Mr Lin’s company confirmed the execution in a statement on Tuesday on the Weibo social media platform.

CHENGDU, CHINA - MAY 25: Lin Qi, Chairman and CEO of Yoozoo Games Co., Ltd, speaks during a meeting on May 25, 2018 in Chengdu, Sichuan Province of China. (Photo by Zhang Zhi/Red Star News/VCG via Getty Images)
Lin Qi was poisoned and killed by Xu Yao (Picture: Getty)

‘Recently, the case concerning Mr Lin Qi, the founder of Three-Body Universe, has finally reached its conclusion, and justice has ultimately been served,’ the statement read.

‘All of us at the company are deeply grateful for the upholding of justice.’

According to local media reports, Xu spent hundreds of thousands of Chinese Yuan to buy highly toxic substances online, including alpha-amanitin, a lethal compound found in some poisonous mushrooms.

He disguised the poisons as probiotic pills, and put them inside coffee capsules, water containers, and whisky bottles, which he then shared with Mr Lin and other company employees.

Mr Lin was taken to the hospital in December 2020 and died a few days later, at the age of 39. Several others fell ill but recovered, according to local media.

Mr Liu became the first Chinese writer to win the prestigious Hugo Award, the genre’s biggest prize.

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