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The murder plot behind ‘3 Body Problem’

- DAVID PIERSON NEW YORK TIMES

>> Lin Qi was a billionair­e with a dream. The video game tycoon had wanted to turn one of China’s most famous science-fiction novels, The Three-Body Problem, into a global hit. He had started working with Netflix and the creators of the HBO series Game of Thrones to bring the alien invasion saga to internatio­nal audiences.

But Lin did not live to see 3 Body Problem premiere on Netflix last month, drawing millions of viewers.

He was poisoned to death in Shanghai in 2020, at age 39, by a disgruntle­d colleague, in a killing that riveted the country’s tech and video-gaming circles where he had been a prominent rising star.

That colleague, Xu Yao, a 43-yearold former executive in Lin’s company, was sentenced l ast month to death for murder by a court in Shanghai, which called his actions “extremely despicable”.

The court has made few specific details public, but Lin’s killing was, as a Chinese news outlet put it, “as bizarre as a Hollywood blockbuste­r”.

Chinese media reports, citing sources in his company and court documents, have described a tale of deadly corporate ambition and rivalry with a macabre edge.

Sidelined at work, Xu reportedly exacted vengeance with meticulous planning, including by testing poisons on small animals in a makeshift lab. (He not only killed Lin, but poisoned his own replacemen­t.)

Lin had spent millions of dollars in 2014 buying up copyrights and licences connected to the original Chinese science-fiction book, The Three-Body Problem, and two others in a trilogy written by Chinese author Liu Cixin.

The Three-Body Problem tells the story of an engineer, called upon by Chinese authoritie­s to look into a spate of suicides by scientists, who discovers an extraterre­strial plot. Lin had wanted to build a franchise of global television shows and films akin to Star Wars and centred on the novels.

Lin would eventually link up with David Benioff and D B Weiss, creators of the television series Game of Thrones, to work on the Netflix project.

Lin’s gaming company, Youzu Interactiv­e, which goes by Yoozoo in English, is no stranger to the HBO hit; its best-known release is an online strategy game based on the show called Game of Thrones: Winter Is Coming.

Lin’s fate would change when he hired Xu, a lawyer, in 2017 to head a Yoozoo subsidiary called The ThreeBody Universe that held the rights to Liu’s novels. But not long afterward, Xu was demoted and his pay was cut, apparently because of poor performanc­e. He became furious, according to Chinese business magazine Caixin.

As Xu plotted his revenge, Caixin reported, he built a lab in an outlying district of Shanghai where he experiment­ed with hundreds of poisons he bought off the dark web by testing them on dogs, cats and other pets.

Caixin said Xu was both fascinated and inspired by the American hit TV series Breaking Bad, about a cancer-stricken chemistry teacher who teaches himself to make and sell methamphet­amine, eventually becoming a drug lord.

Between September and December 2020, Xu began spiking beverages such as coffee, whiskey and drinking water with methylmerc­ury chloride and bringing them into the office, Caixin reported, citing court documents.

“The plot is as bizarre as a Hollywood blockbuste­r, and the technique is profession­al enough to be called the Chinese version of Breaking Bad,” Phoenix News, a Chinese news outlet, said last month.

Police arrested Xu on Dec 18, 2020, the Shanghai No. 1 Intermedia­te People’s Court said as it announced the verdict and sentencing.

Xu reportedly declined to confess to the crime and did not disclose what poison he had used, complicati­ng doctors’ efforts to save Lin’s life.

The court said Xu had plotted to poison Lin and four other people over an office dispute. Its post included a picture of a bespectacl­ed Xu in the courtroom wearing an oversize beige cardigan surrounded by three police officers. More than 50 people, including members of Xu’s family and Lin’s family, attended the sentencing.

Before his untimely death, Lin was something of a celebrity in the world of young Chinese entreprene­urs. He had built his fortune in the early 2010s, riding a wave of popularity for mobile games. His bid to popularise Liu’s novels was a rare attempt to export Chinese popular culture — something that has eluded China as its government yearns to wield the same soft power the United States commands with its movies, music and sports stars.

 ?? ?? TANGLED PAST: From left, David Benioff, Alexander Woo and D B Weiss, creators of the Netflix series ‘3 Body Problem’, in Austin, Texas, on March 7.
TANGLED PAST: From left, David Benioff, Alexander Woo and D B Weiss, creators of the Netflix series ‘3 Body Problem’, in Austin, Texas, on March 7.

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