THIS is the terrifying moment that a Ferrari crash is thought to have killed the creator Call of Duty.
The shocking footage shows a red sports car smashing into a concrete barrier, in an accident which is thought to have killed Vince Zampella, 55.
It shows the car emerging at speed from a tunnel before colliding with a barrier, and bursting into flames.
Bystanders can be heard shouting “oh sh**t” before they run to the fiery wreck to help.
They then drag what seems to be a passenger away from the burning car.
Zampella died on 20 December in a tragic car accident on Angeles Crest Highway, California.
The California Highway Patrol said that video-game mogul Zampella was driving the Ferrari, and was trapped in the car as it caught fire.
The 55-year-old was declared dead at the scene.
An unidentified passenger was taken to hospital after having been thrown from the car as it crashed, but later died from their injuries.
Zampella was a self-made tech tycoon who dropped out of college to work in the video game industry before opening his own studio, Infinity Ward.
He worked as a designer for the Medal of Honor series in the late 1990s and early 2000s, before spearheading the creation of Call of Duty, released in 2003.
The Call of Duty franchise went on to generate an estimated $35 billion in revenue in the next 20 years.
At the time of his death, Zampella was the head of Respawn Entertainment, which created Apex Legends, the Titanfall series, and the Star Wars Jedi series.
The 55-year-old had been working on the Battlefield franchise for EA before the California car accident which took his life.
The Battlefield team wrote on Instagram that his death had left them “heartbroken”.
They called Zampella “creative leader whose work shaped generations of players” in an emotional tribute.
The Battlefield team wrote: “While his impact reached far beyond any one game or studio, we will remember Vince for how he showed up every day, trusting his teams, encouraging bold ideas, and believing in Battlefield and the people building it.
“We are deeply grateful for his leadership, his generosity, and the care he brought to everything he touched, and we will carry that forward with us.”