Xbox Layoffs, Game Cancellations After Acquisition Blitz Continue
from the liar-liar dept
It’s no secret that starting during the onset of the pandemic, as well as in its aftermath, the video game industry has undergone a period of consolidation. This is quite common during times of economic flux and/or turmoil, but Microsoft/Xbox appeared to go after acquisitions in something of a blitz. While Xbox gobbled up several studios, the apex of this blitz was its controversial acquisition of Activision Blizzard. The FTC attempted to oppose the $69 billion deal unsuccessfully, arguing that the deal would be bad for customers and the industry as a whole, as these deals typically end with laid off workers, the closing of studios for “efficiency” reasons, and fewer game titles hitting the market. Microsoft responded to that by insisting that those studios would undergo a limited integration with the overall Microsoft ecosystem and that the “vertical” nature of the acquisition meant that layoffs over overlapping roles wouldn’t happen. And so the deal was consummated in October of 2023.
The layoffs began almost immediately in January of 2024. Roughly 2,000 staff had their employment terminated, including staff from the Activision Blizzard studios. The stated reason for those layoffs in part was “areas of overlap” across the companies, or the very thing Blizzard promised the courts it wouldn’t do. According to Xbox, this would allow the company to “deliver ambitious games on more platforms and in more places than ever before” and to allow for “sustainable growth.” The FTC attempted to appeal its loss, pointing out that both these layoffs and the changes Xbox made to enshittify its Game Pass product were in direct contradiction to promises made during the FTC fight. That effort ultimately ended in May of this year when the Ninth Circuit refused to issue any kind of injunction and the FTC dropped its case.
Having gotten away with its lies to the courts, Xbox is now continuing its layoffs apace and canceling games as a result.
Reports and rumors of massive layoffs at Xbox have been building since late last month, and the first blood has now been spilled. Bloomberg reports that Candy Crush maker King is cutting 200 employees, or roughly 10 percent of its 2,000-person headcount, while multiple games across various Xbox studios, including the Perfect Dark reboot, have been canceled.
The Seattle Times reports that this is part of a larger 9,100-person cut to personnel across the tech giant. “We continue to implement organizational and workforce changes that are necessary to position the company and teams for success in a dynamic marketplace,” a Microsoft spokesperson told VGC, with Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil writing in a memo to staff that the layoffs “end or decrease work in certain areas of the business and follow Microsoft’s lead in removing layers of management to increase agility and effectiveness.”
Along with the layoffs are the cancellation of several games, most of them new IP. Since January of 2024, the staffing cuts have been on a near continuous drip, but now that the FTC is no longer paying attention it seems Xbox is opening the spigot. And it is starting to sound like it won’t just be percentage layoffs at these studios, but the closure of some of those studios as well.
Around 600 more layoffs followed in September, with Microsoft saying at the time that no games were canceled as a result of that round of cuts.
That’s unlikely to be the case this time around, with the full extent of the culling rumored to potentially include entire studios. Microsoft’s expansive portfolio of game development teams includes ones like Obsidian Entertainment which have prodigiously shipped almost half a dozen games since being bought, as well as others like Undead Labs which have spent years working on sequels that have yet to materialize. Xbox has also been retreating from its console hardware business amidst reported pressure to improve its bottom line, leading to major first-party exclusives like Sea of Thieves and Gears of War going multiplatform on PlayStation 5.
So, these acquisitions were not going to result in layoffs. Then, when the layoffs began, they were done to position Xbox for sustainable growth and to allow for more titles to be brought to more platforms. Now, the predicted growth has morphed into further, more massive layoffs, while the promise of more titles has morphed into canceled games and shuttering potentially entire studios instead.
I realize that regulatory bodies in America these days are roughly as useful as a fishnet condom, but are they really going to allow such a blatant example of lies and hypocrisy, all to the detriment of the American worker and consumer, go completely unaddressed?
Filed Under: layoffs, video games, xbox
Companies: activision blizzard, microsoft
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Comments on “Xbox Layoffs, Game Cancellations After Acquisition Blitz Continue”
Short answer; yes. Longer answer; line go up so yes.
I have zero faith that anyone in this administration cares about anything other than the rich getting richer- well that, and how inhumane they can be to anyone “other”.
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https://www.dictionary.com/browse/rhetorical
(definition 4)
Well, that’s a pretty interesting way to phrase things, isn’t it? It leaves open the possibility that the layoffs happened because the games were canceled (“Now that we’ve canceled some games, we don’t need so many employees”), a situation that’s basically indistinguishable from the one they denied. Or maybe the games were canceled as a result of a preceding or following round of cuts, or at the whim of a madman.
Actually, all of the quotes are good examples of how people can use a lot of words to say nothing.
Not only yes, but the mere fact of trying to bring it up would be immediately discounted as “fake news”.
America is an oligarchy, and this benefits the oligarchs, so yes, the beatings will continue until moral improves.
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How can that be when Microsoft doesn’t have any morals to begin with?
I mean. The only thing they wanted to do was buy ip. They bought their competition and canceled them
But Techdirt said The Sky Is Rising for the Game Industry and a lot of other industries!
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Documenting an industry’s growth and being critical of certain parts of that growth are not mutually exclusive, you know.
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It’s dangerous to make people’s heads explode.
As an addendum to this story, shortly after the last round of layoffs happened, Mike Matsel, the principal development lead at Xbox, posted a hiring notice for graphic designers on LinkedIn, and his post was supplemented with what is clearly an AI-generated image.
As this article notes, Microsoft has fired over 20,000 people in about 2½ years, and simultanously committed to spending more than $80 billion on AI. Looks like slop’s back on the menu, boys.
Hire tens of thousands of people through mergers and acquisitions: Number go up.
Fire the people who made the company worth acquring: Number go up
Say you are using the money saved to invest in buzzword: Number go up.
Realise that the people fired did the work and hire a bunch of new people india and call it expansion: Number go up!
Fire the management of a struggling division with golden parachutes for all because number went up slightly less last time: Number go up.
Acquire profitable company and repeat the cycle, not worrying that you have hollowed out your company in a way that 90s HP management would have concerns about: Number go up… Until it doesn’t, then nobody responsible will face any consequences. Capitalism, baby!
Liars
I wonder why these companies and their officers do not get the “common man” treatment for lying to a federal officer… It would be good if some C level executives were jailed for not adhering to the merger promises they made, it would keep corporations at least somewhat honest.
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To start with: what, exactly, was the lie? Timothy describes a supposed “promise” but doesn’t actually quote anything. To know if it’s a lie, we need to know the actual legally-binding claim(s) they made. Did they sign a formal agreement with some regulator(s)? If so, what were the terms, and what were the prescribed penalties for a breach?
Remember that the people involved are experts at phrasing things to give people positive feelings, while not actually saying anything of substance. One of the previous stories quotes Bobby Kotick of Activision Blizzard as saying Microsoft was “committed to trying to retain as many of our people as possible.” That’s a meaningless statement; saying they’re “committed to” doing it isn’t actually a promise to do it. And this statement about Microsoft’s plans was made before the merger was completed, at which time Kotick very likely had no authority to bind Microsoft to anything except by writing it into the purchase contract.
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You’re describing lies and deception to challenge some legalistic wankery definition of “lie”. Good job, report to Microsoft’s Bullshit Department Monday next.
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The question was about when the law was gonna get them for lying. That won’t happen if we ignore the “wankery” that’s the basis of our legal system, and just try to make colloquial definitions stick.
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Talk is cheap. If you want Microsoft executives in jail, point to the law they broke, and the specific actions that broke it. Contrary to what Trump thinks, we’re not supposed to be jailing people just because we don’t like what they did.
Infinite growth is not sustainable. When mergers and acquisitions are not possible anymore huge companies will start cannibalizing themselves in the form of openly hostile actions against their employees and their consumers.
And the US is incentivizing the consolidation of mega corporations.
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Tell that to supernova nebula.
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Supernova is the process undergone, rather than the object itself. Also, not infinite.
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A nebula’s (the product of a supernova) expansion is, while not infinite, about as boundless as a single thing you can see can possibly be. Since it will continue to drift further and further apart.
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Neither of those things are infinite.
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There’s a saying that “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent”, but it kind of works in reverse too. Which is to say that sustainability doesn’t necessarily matter to the people in charge. They just need the numbers to remain good till they retire.
Retiring executives used to collect pensions from their companies, but they mostly put a stop to pensions decades ago. At best, they’ll need a few years to sell off their stock options, and then what happens to the company won’t affect their finances at all.
The people in charge of the country don’t necessarily retire, but if you look how old some of them are, they’re not likely to be around to deal with whatever problems they create either.
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But Techdirt said last year that The Sky Is Rising! So much money in videogames and other industries!
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One can always count on a monopolist to fuck up a good thing.
Turns out the people who didn't have their heads up MS's backside were right...
I sure hope the people who approved the merger spent time beforehand practicing their ‘shocked and surprised’ faces for when it turned out that those critical of it were right in saying Microsoft were lying, that way they’ll already be ready for the next merger that they’ll rubberstamp when the exact same thing will happen because who could have seen it happening again?
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You clearly don’t understand how this works. When Microsoft wants their next merger approved, the people who approved this one will already be Microsoft employees. The film “The Big Short” had a scene explaining this (“How are you floating your resumé to big banks? I mean, you’re supposed to be the ones, you know, policing the big banks”).