No Man’s Sky creator finally “open” to talk about No Man’s Sky complaints

He might be open to it, but that doesn't mean much.

It looks like the No Man's Sky creator might be breaking his silence on the issues surrounding the game in October.

No Man's Sky was dragged into the spotlight once again this week, thanks to the Advertising Standards Authority investigating the developers for using false advertisement. It wasn't the first time the game suffered such a claim, fans had claimed that the game's trailers and creator mislead them, however, it is the most official form of the claim.

Over the past few weeks since the game's launch on PS4 and PC, the game suffered bugs that lead to players either refunding the game or simply quit playing (the player count dropped below 1,000 players on Steam).

On top of the player troubles, Sony's President stated that No Man's Sky had been overpromised. All the while, the most vocal person on No Man's Sky, creator Sean Murray, had stayed silent.

At the end of Geoff Keighley's premiere episode of his new series 'LIVE with YouTube Gaming,' Keighley revealed that Murray had requested that he was told to keep his distance from Hello Games because he was too "negative.

Begin the video at 1 hour 47 minutes for the No Man's Sky bit: 

Keighley went on to say that he had disagreed to the game being packaged and sold for $60, instead of as an early access game – he even compared Murray to Peter Molyneux. After the criticism, Keighley revealed that Murray is "open" to appearing on the show in October to discuss the game.

It will be Murray's first appearance since the game's release.