Plot
At the 1988 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Dutch video game designer Henk Rogers of Bullet-Proof Software discovers Tetris, a captivating puzzle game developed by Soviet programmer Alexey Pajitnov. Tetris is owned by the Soviet Union's ELORG. Rogers learns that the worldwide licensing rights were sold to British entrepreneur Robert Stein, who sublicensed them to Robert Maxwell's Mirrorsoft, headed by Maxwell's son, Kevin. Rogers acquires the rights to distribute Tetris in Japan for PC, console, and arcade.
Rogers pitches a partnership to Nintendo CEO Hiroshi Yamauchi, proposing to adapt Tetris for the Famicom home console and arcades. Yamauchi agrees, and Rogers secures a $3 million loan from bank manager Eddie, using his family home as collateral. However, Kevin informs Rogers that Sega has already been promised arcade rights, complicating Rogers's ability to move forward with the Famicom version. Rogers desperately presses Nintendo for an advance on residuals, hoping to buy enough time to secure the needed rights, but is instead redirected to Nintendo's Seattle headquarters. There, Rogers proposes Tetris as the launch title for Nintendo's upcoming Game Boy handheld console instead of Super Mario Land. Nintendo of America's President Minoru Arakawa and General Counsel Howard Lincoln agree, provided Rogers secures handheld rights.
Rogers negotiates with Stein in London, offering $25,000 for the handheld rights. However, Stein later promises the rights to Atari Games for $100,000. Realizing he must deal directly with ELORG, Rogers travels to Moscow despite the risks of operating in a tightly controlled Soviet system. At ELORG, Rogers meets chairman Nikolai Belikov and learns that his Famicom version of Tetris is considered illegal because Stein exploited ambiguous contract language to sublicense rights beyond PC versions. Rogers reveals these manipulations, leading Belikov to draft a new contract defining platform-specific rights.
Rogers meets Pajitnov, and they gradually develop a friendship. The growing potential of Tetris attracts scrutiny from Valentin Trifonov, a corrupt Communist Party official with KGB connections. Trifonov attempts to leverage Tetris as a political and financial asset, threatening Rogers, Pajitnov, and their families. Trifonov pressures Belikov into selling Tetris to Mirrorsoft. Belikov tells Kevin that Mirrorsoft can have Tetris if they are wired $1 million within a week. Belikov then privately talks to Rogers about making his own offer within the week and gives him a separate letter of intent. Back in Tokyo, Rogers faces personal strain when his dedication to the Tetris deal causes him to miss his daughter Maya's concert.
Ordered by Belikov, Pajitnov faxes Mirrorsoft's letter to Rogers at his job, showing that Mirrorsoft failed to obtain Tetris rights on the agreed upon deadline. Nintendo tells Rogers of Atari releasing their Tetris version. Rogers says Stein and the Maxwells lied and that the letter expired the day before, meaning Atari has zero rights to Tetris. He urges Arakawa and Lincoln to finalize the deal in Moscow. Stein furiously confronts Kevin for dealing with ELORG behind his back, leading the Maxwells to personally warn Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev against selling to capitalist interests. Gorbachev dismisses their concerns but orders Trifonov to be monitored. ELORG ultimately accepts Nintendo's $5 million offer for console and handheld rights.
Tensions escalate when Robert Maxwell offers Trifonov a 50% stake in Tetris in exchange for blocking Rogers. A high-stakes car chase ensues as Trifonov tries to intercept Rogers, Arakawa, and Lincoln en route to the airport. Sasha, Rogers's interpreter and a covert KGB agent, intervenes to arrest Trifonov, allowing the trio to escape. Rogers returns to Tokyo and reconciles with his family.
Tetris becomes a global phenomenon following its release on Game Boy and other platforms. In his homeland, Pajitnov watches the Singing Revolution and receives a Game Boy with Tetris from Rogers. Rogers helps Pajitnov and his family relocate to the US. An epilogue reveals Rogers and Pajitnov co-founded The Tetris Company, of which Maya later becomes CEO, and remain friends.