Immutable, a leading Web3 gaming company, announced that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has formally closed its investigations into the company and related parties without any findings of wrongdoing or further action.
In November 2024, the SEC issued a Wells notice to the Web3 gaming company alleging that it was in potential violation of securities laws. In a report, Immutable called the notice the latest in the agency’s policy of regulation by enforcement, which was targeting leading Web3 companies, such as Ripple, OpenSea, and Coinbase.
While the SEC did not state it in its notice, Immutable believes the inquiry targeted the listing and sales of its tokens IMX in 2021 and expressed confidence that its assets and services were not in violation of any laws.
“We are confident in the legality of our assets and services, in the value digital ownership can bring to 3.1 billion gamers across the world, and in the power of blockchain to create a better internet. If required, we will fight for these rights, and those of our industry, vigorously,” the report said.
Last year, the SEC issued Immutable a Wells Notice.
That inquiry is now officially closed, with zero findings of wrongdoing, and the SEC is taking no action.
This is a huge win – not just for web3 gaming, but everyone who believes in digital ownership rights.
Let's build.
— Immutable (@Immutable) March 25, 2025
On March 25, 2025, the Web3 gaming company announced that the SEC has decided to formally end all investigations into Immutable, the IMX Ecosystem Foundation, and its CEO. Also, the regulator would not be taking any further enforcement actions. “The SEC’s decision to end its investigation is a win for all builders, creators and gamers fighting for true digital ownership in gaming,” the Web3 gaming firm shared in a news release, adding that it is vindicated in its longstanding focus on legal and regulatory compliance.
The SEC dropping its inquiry into Immutable aligns with the broader shift of the regulatory landscape under President Trump. In January 2025, the SEC established a crypto task force led by Hester Peirce, charged with creating comprehensive and clear regulatory frameworks governing digital assets.
The SEC also dropped its case against Ripple, with more settlements and agreements agreed earlier today. Immutable says it welcomes the U.S. government’s commitment to creating clear frameworks for digital assets, adding that, “Constructive regulation provides certainty for builders, and helps foster the innovative potential of blockchain technology.”
Immutable recorded about $80 million in NFT sales volume in Q4 2024, according to a Messari report. The conclusion of the SEC’s inquiry would have significant effects on the Web3 gaming industry. Regulatory clarity will help unlock investments and help Immutable to tokenize the in-game purchase market, which is worth over $100 billion.
After the SEC closed the Inquiry, Immutable co-founder Robbie Ferguson, in a post on X, said it was a huge win not just for Web3 gaming but also digital asset ownership rights, saying the threats to digital asset ownership have been removed.
The company, throughout the SEC investigation, was working on its vision to bring digital ownership to the 3.1 billion gamers worldwide. Ferguson believes overcoming the investigation brings Immutable closer to onboarding gamers on-chain.
The closure of the SEC’s investigation follows a trend of reevaluating enforcement actions against Web3 and digital asset firms under the Trump administration.
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