Remedy’s new trademark, “Control: Resonant,” just popped up — is Control 2 about to be revealed?

Remedy’s new trademark, “Control: Resonant,” just popped up — is Control 2 about to be revealed?

Game intel

Control Resonant

View hub

Control Ultimate Edition contains the main game and all previously released Expansions ("The Foundation" and "AWE") in one great value package. Winner of over…

Genre: Shooter, AdventureRelease: 8/27/2020

Why this trademark matters – and why it caught my attention

On November 27 a European trademark filing for “Control: Resonant” showed up under Nordia Attorneys at Law – the same firm that handles Remedy’s IP. That kind of legal breadcrumb is usually boring, but this one is interesting: it’s registered not just for “video games” but also for audiovisual productions. That combo screams one of two things to me – either Remedy is about to announce Control 2 with a multimedia push, or someone is teeing up a coordinated reveal at the Game Awards. Either way, it changes expectations for the franchise.

  • This caught my attention because Nordia has repeatedly handled Remedy filings — this isn’t a random squat.
  • The EUIPO classification includes both video games and TV/film — suggesting a game, an adaptation, or a combined project.
  • The timing — days before The Game Awards — looks deliberately positioned for a big reveal.

Key takeaways for gamers

  • Control: Resonant is likely tied to the confirmed Control 2 project, but the “Resonant” subtitle could point to a broader multimedia effort.
  • Remedy needs a win here — the studio took heavy losses on the multiplayer spin-off FBC Firebreaker, making a strong single-player sequel commercially important.
  • Expect a Game Awards reveal or tease: Remedy has history of using big events for major announcements.

Breaking down the filing: what it actually says

The filing on November 27 went through the EU Intellectual Property Office and lists categories for video games and audiovisual productions. That dual listing is the hook — it opens the door to interpretations beyond “just a sequel.” Nordia Attorneys at Law have previously handled Remedy’s IP registrations, so this looks intentional rather than a third party grabbing a name.

Skepticism is healthy: studios trademark tons of names as part of IP protection, and not every filing becomes a full-scale product. But when you pair the timing, the legal rep involved, and the fact Control 2 has been in production, this looks like more than bureaucracy.

Why this matters for Remedy — and for players

Remedy confirmed Control 2 development years ago and said it entered full production in 2025. The studio also suffered a notable misstep with FBC Firebreaker, which generated significant financial fallout. For Remedy, a return to the single-player strengths that made the first Control a critical win is strategically important. A successful Control 2 could reset confidence with players and investors.

Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition
Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition

From a player’s perspective, the speculation around “Resonant” matters because the original Control built its identity around weird physics, Objects of Power, and resonance-like concepts — the subtitle could be a theme indicator rather than fluff. If Remedy is leaning into those ideas, the sequel could deepen the franchise’s most interesting systems instead of chasing multiplayer fashions.

What “Resonant” might actually mean

There are a few plausible readings. The simplest: “Control: Resonant” is the official subtitle for Control 2, signaling narrative themes about vibration, echo, and frequency — concepts already baked into Control’s lore. The audiovisual registration, however, suggests alternatives: a TV/film adaptation (Remedy has partnered with Annapurna for adaptations before) or a synchronized multimedia rollout — a game announced alongside a short series, perhaps.

Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition
Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition

Another angle is genre evolution. Remedy has implied Control 2 will lean more into action-RPG elements. If true, expect expanded progression systems, deeper ability trees, and larger sprawling environments — things that would make the IP more franchise-friendly for long-term monetization and cross-media storytelling.

What to expect at The Game Awards

The Game Awards on December 11-12 is the obvious stage. If Remedy wants a high-impact unveiling, this is it: a cinematic trailer, an official title confirmation, release-window tease, and platform call-outs (PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S). I’d also watch for hints about whether any TV or film project is being greenlit — a simultaneous multimedia announcement would be loud, and Remedy has shown an appetite for expanding its Connected Universe.

Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition
Screenshot from Control: Ultimate Edition

But don’t take the trademark as gospel proof. Companies trademark dozens of names and categories; sometimes it’s strategic posturing. The responsible takeaway: there’s a high likelihood of an announcement, but we should wait for Remedy to show the game itself before reshaping expectations.

TL;DR

“Control: Resonant” is a trademark filing that lines up with Control 2’s confirmed development and hints at either a subtitle, a multimedia tie-in, or both. The timing ahead of The Game Awards suggests Remedy is preparing a public reveal — but file registrations aren’t guarantees, so stay cautiously excited.

G
GAIA
Published 11/28/2025Updated 1/2/2026
5 min read
Gaming
🎮
🚀

Want to Level Up Your Gaming?

Get access to exclusive strategies, hidden tips, and pro-level insights that we don't share publicly.

Exclusive Bonus Content:

Ultimate Gaming Strategy Guide + Weekly Pro Tips

Instant deliveryNo spam, unsubscribe anytime