Man, sympathies to everyone caught up in this. The hits keep on coming.
You know, monopoly commissions are always worried about how mergers will affect the market for consumers, but maybe they should also start asking how they affect the *job* market for staff…
https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/25/24049050/microsoft-activision-blizzard-layoffs
@trabex @antonyjohnston programmer here – I am sort of under the impression that because a good chunk of us got into programming because of our love of video games, there's sort of an over-supply of programmers that want to work for video game studios. I mean, early on in my career, working somewhere like Blizzard was certainly appealing to me, for example, it just never worked out for me. This allows them to sort of take advantage of that and pay less, run them harder, etc, etc.
@trabex @antonyjohnston Yup; seems like a tough business.
Heh one man's "exploiting passion for profit" is another's "derive gains from trade".
It's become especially crowded with the democratization of development software in the form of Unity and Unreal Engine, both of which have been free (at least, until recently).
I once tried to program a retro RPG myself. About 200 hours into the development process, I had maybe 3 hours of gameplay to show for it.
Corporate profits are a problem, but it also really isn't that easy to balance expenditure and income when you make no income for a long time.
@ech @antonyjohnston
There have always been companies exploiting passion for profit. The video game industry is particularly bad at it.
One caveat: there's no way to know what the sales of your game will look like while you're in the middle of making it. You have an educated guesstimate, at best. For this reason, companies have good reason to keep costs low and bring the product out as soon as possible (even if it means a buggy, unfinished mess)