Key points:
- Epic Games has hired Reggie Davis as general counsel, succeeding long-time GC Canon Pence.
- Davis has led legal teams through IPOs at Zynga and DocuSign.
- The appointment is fueling renewed market speculation about a potential Epic Games IPO.
Epic Games has appointed veteran technology lawyer Reggie Davis as its new general counsel, a move that is drawing attention across legal and financial circles given his experience guiding companies through initial public offerings, as reported by Corporate Counsel.
Davis joins the Cary, North Carolina-based videogame company after five years as chief legal officer at Qualia Labs, a real estate technology startup. He announced the move on LinkedIn, writing: “Let the games begin ... !”
With more than two decades of in-house legal experience, Davis is well known in Silicon Valley legal circles. He began his career at Yahoo! in 2000, eventually serving as vice president. He later became general counsel at Zynga Game Network and chief legal, privacy and compliance officer at DocuSign — roles that placed him at the center of both companies’ transitions to the public markets.
At Epic, Davis succeeds Canon Pence, who served as general counsel for 14 years before departing at the end of 2025. Pence reflected on his tenure in a December LinkedIn post, noting the legal team he helped build and the opportunities he experienced during the company’s growth.
Epic Games, founded in 1991, became a global consumer brand with the 2017 launch of Fortnite. In legal and regulatory circles, the company is equally known for its aggressive antitrust litigation against Apple and Google, filed in 2020 over app store payment policies.
Those cases produced divergent outcomes. In Epic’s lawsuit against Google, a federal jury sided with the game developer in December 2023, leading a judge to order significant changes to Google’s Play Store practices, as detailed in Legaltech News. Epic’s case against Apple yielded a mixed ruling, with the court rejecting monopoly claims but requiring Apple to allow developers to link to external payment options.
Epic has not publicly stated plans to go public, but Davis’ background has reignited speculation. Zynga went public roughly two years into his tenure as general counsel, while DocuSign’s IPO followed four years after he took on its top legal role.
The company last raised capital in 2024, when Disney led a $1.5 billion funding round valuing Epic at $22.5 billion. With IPO markets widely expected to reopen further in 2026, the addition of a general counsel with deep public-company experience is likely to keep deal-watchers attentive.









