Leaks happen all the time in entertainment. Series 8 of Doctor Who had the first 5-6 episodes have their scripts leak (and some episodes had their no-effects cuts leak too), but the BBC didn't send a detective agency behind whoever leaked the scripts. Genshin Impact, a gacha game made in China, has leaks from its beta testing constantly, and while people get banned or lose access to future builds because of that stuff, even they don't do something as pointless as what WotC allegedly did. If this is true, this is beyond defensible.
Leaks like this from the MTG side of WotC which some of you may know a little about
RARELY happen on this scale and with this amount of product. Using an outside agency to look into stuff like
HAPPENS ALL THE TIME.
The only reason this got any traction is because 1. It was a content creator and 2. It was WotC.
And you all because the way WotC treats the D&D community automatically think bad. Call it hyperbole but I honestly think some of you would believe it or wouldn't give them the benefit of the doubt if someone told you WotC kicks puppies and kitten.
WotC has taken steps similar in nature to pervious MTG leaks like this.
Spoiler
Time Spiral
In December 2005, Daron Rutter, under the name "rancored_elf", posted an image of three
Time Spiral playtest cards on
MTG Salvation, nine months before that set was released. This leak led to legal action against Rutter and ten John Doe defendants, which was settled out of court.
On April 20, 2011, the entirety of
New Phyrexia was leaked when unauthorized players gained access to the set's "God Book". The "God Book", an item containing each card in the set, had been provided to
Pro Tour player and journalist
Guillaume Matignon for his use in writing for
Lotus Noir. Matignon shared it with
Guillaume Wafo-Tapa, after which it became available to the wider internet. Wizards then accelerated their normal preview schedule, providing official previews for the set over the course of a single week. Ultimately, four players, including both Matignon and Wafo-Tapa, received DCI suspensions for their part in the leaks, though Matignon's was later shortened.
Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur's Gate
On April 15, 2022, eight weeks before the release of
Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur's Gate, someone opened five stolen
Collector Boosters on TikTok. Multiple cards and mechanics were revealed. After being threatened with legal action, he created other accounts on TikTok and revealed even more cards.