If you break as many records and get as big as Star Citizen, chances are that sooner or later you're going to start tangling with regulators. Cloud Imperium Games has just experienced this on the legs of crossing $383 million in crowdfunding. One disgruntled backer reported the company to the authorities, which led to the addition of a new disclaimer to its unfinished ships.

It's been many long years since Star Citizen, the passion project helmed by Wing Commander creator Chris Roberts, left Kickstarter behind with a record-setting campaign. That said, the crowdfunding never stopped - they just moved to their own platform. These days, crowdfunding Star Citizen is done by purchasing game packages and in-game starships for real money.

While the game is still unreleased with no fixed launch date in sight - which is the source of a great deal of controversy - a sizeable chunk is playable with a ton of features implemented, and players who own game packages can fly around the virtual universe with the ships they own - at least, most of them.

Thing is, Cloud Imperium Games is selling ships it hasn't finished making yet. You can purchase some ships which are as early on as a concept phase, far from being in a flyable state. In many cases, due to the way the design and development process works, iterations lead to the final version being quite different from what was initially revealed - and sold. This business model is what attracted the heat this time around.