Demands stocks for ten million gaming companies



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Television personality Hallvard Flatland is in conflict with Gaming Technology Group (GIG) gaming technology company for an amount of 3.4 million shares of the company. He writes the affairs of today.

Start football club also owns the GIG, which manages casinos and online games for the private market.

– Ten million crowns

According to the newspaper, Flatland estimates that "in 2015, he signed an agreement on fees, which should rise to ten million dollars. Society, on the other hand, denies the existence of such an agreement.

Flatland and its television company, Euro TV, sued GIG and demanded the transfer of shares in the amount of ten million crowns. According to Dagens Næringsliv, the shares were worth NOK 4 million at the time of the signing of the agreement.

– Disagree

According to Euro TV, the agreement with GIG states that Flatland should be made available to the company and work for it. GIG should never have used Flatland, but since he's available to the company, Flatland estimates he's entitled to 3.4 million shares.

– No verbal agreement was signed on 30 April 2015 and the request is therefore unfounded. The parties discussed the possibility of cooperation, but there was never agreement, neither before nor during the meeting, according to Dagens Næringsliv, according to Dagens Næringsliv, according to which Flatland held shares worth NOK 1.5 million in GIG at the end of 2017.

The parties meet at the Bergen District Court at the end of October.

The gaming technology company GIG, which has offices in Kristiansand, has achieved a business turnover of NOK 716 million in the first half of 2018, but has recorded a loss of pre-tax profit close to NOK 33 million.

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