6 points

This is the best summary I could come up with:


While Microsoft is primarily laying off roles at Activision Blizzard, some Xbox and ZeniMax employees will also be impacted by the cuts.

His influence will be felt for years to come, both directly and indirectly as Allen plans to continue mentoring young designers across the industry,” says Booty.

Booty says Microsoft will be “shifting some of the people working on it to one of several promising new projects Blizzard has in the early stages of development.”

Microsoft completed its $68.7 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard in October, following 20 months of battles with regulators in the UK and US.

Former Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick stepped down at the end of December, with Microsoft not appointing a direct replacement.

The software maker is due to report its fiscal Q2 2024 earnings next week, which, for the first time, will include results from the impact of the Activision Blizzard acquisition.


The original article contains 397 words, the summary contains 149 words. Saved 62%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

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-63 points

This is the best I could muster this morning: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

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26 points

Why is it funny to see 1900 people lose their jobs? You can hate the corporations and those at the top, but I’d wager the vast majority of those laid off are just normal people trying to make a living.

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-46 points
*

It’s funny to see 1900 people lose their jobs because they stayed instead of protesting the merger. If they’re working at Microsoft/Activision/Blizzard, I promise you they don’t have any real problems in life. Many of us told people that as soon as the merger went through they were going to axe a large portion of the staff, and we got “oh no that doesn’t happen!”.

So this, just like every merger before it, was a stupid idea to let pass, and I’m glad people are suffering for it, because maybe a little introspection will do them well.

But hey, can’t really expect that much out of America, so oh well.

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27 points

Protest the merger? There’s nothing they can do.

And after that do you expect them all to up and leave? Every single one? I don’t know what world you live in.

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22 points

If they had, the merger would have still happened. That’s an awful opinion and you should be embarrassed but I expect instead you’ll double down.

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5 points
Removed by mod
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10 points

What a shitty thing to think.

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106 points

68 billion to acquire IP, but can’t afford to pay the people who make and maintain it.

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45 points

Well, yeah.

The shareholders demanded a sacrifice. You really think any of the top brass would be affected?

They literally do 1000 times the work the devs do to justify the millions in pay and compensation, and the whole place would grind to a halt if they were affected (/s if you believe that)

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80 points

Can*

Doesn’t

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4 points

Cansn’t

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-2 points
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a lot of these jobs are among the first where humans are being replaced by AI… it’s not likely to slow down soon…

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5 points

We’re in open-season mode for AI at my day job. No one’s being replaced by AI.

It’s a great tool for code/copy generation, but it gets so much wrong that now we’re both coders and qa for bots feeding us scaffolding code.

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5 points
*

A coworker screenshotted an AI hallucination yesterday that vomited pages of garbage into their IDE. At least today AI isn’t gonna replace programmers entirely.

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2 points

When such acquisitions are happening all what happens is that the stock/shares of one company (Activision/Blizzard in this example) is replaced by the stock/shares of another company (MS in this example) and the purchasing price is simply another way of discussing the stock exchange ratio. Company can have zero money to do that.

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37 points

Layoffs after this size of merger are pretty typical. The number of people seems high, but it might be due to Activision’s own acquisitions over the years.

First round of layoffs after a merger is consolidation of corporate administrative functions. ActiBlizz finance, accounting, HR, etc is no longer needed. Microsoft already has all those needs covered. And it wouldn’t surprise me to learn ActiBlizz had a lot of administrative bloat.

Most of the knowledge workers will be kept for now. Will be future cuts there as objectives are finalized and staff needed becomes clear.

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-3 points
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ActiBlizz finance, accounting, HR, etc is no longer needed. Microsoft already has all those needs covered.

That’s not 1900 people, that’s like 50.

I’ve been part of these before; they cut by pay. Junior artist? You stay. Senior artist? Bye. It goes all the way down to QA. A place I used to work at had massive layoffs, and were left with a QA team of 15 whose most senior member had 6 months in the industry.

This is phase 2. Phase one was last year when they laid of 10,000. those were the finance/accounting/etc people. This is specifically the games area which at this point, according to my friends caught in said layoff, says it’s mostly seniors across all (gaming) divisions.

EDIT: To be clear to the downvoters: 1. I worked at Microsoft (gaming) 5 years ago, and was caught in one of these layoffs. 2. It won’t be areas like accounting/HR/finance because that was last year. I know people caught in these layoffs, and it’s seniors in each department.

Microsoft uses, especially in Canada, a system to bypass hiring full-time employees, which they have to do here legally after 5 years of employment every X years (I forget how many). They hire from 3rd party contractors, and then refuse to rehire you after you’ve worked 4+ years, until a six month gap has occurred and you change 3rd party vendors. They do this with over half of their employees, so their gaming division has a TINY HR department because most of the staff don’t technically work for Microsoft. I met ‘our’ HR at a meeting shortly before we were all laid off, and had never had any contact with any of them (nor anyone in payroll, etc, because that was all done by our 3rd party vendors.)

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15 points
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lol no. 50 might just cover ActiBlizz accounts payable department.

I work for a similar sized company now. We have around 300 just in Finance. Another nearly that many in accounting. When companies get this big they have a lot of spending and assets to track.

Then you get into Marketing, Sales, HR, etc. I’d confidently bet 90% of the 1900 roles were corporate administration. I’ve personally gone through this process multiple times. I’ve even been part of making consolidation decisions for a few of them.

Edit: What you experienced will happen. But as phase 2.

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10 points

not a chance thats 50 people. it could be 50 HR business partners alone. that 1900 could easily be entirely backoffice positions

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1 point

Probably because they will cut people from,small games and invest in the big Activision franchise

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1 point

They acquired another company, that always means there will be a lot of redundancies between the two and they need to cut them

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1 point
*

They hardly maintain them anymore…

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213 points

It is worth understanding that this is “different” than… all the other layoffs in tech at this point.

MS acquired ABK. Any acquisition almost always leads to “downsizing”. At a high level: ABK would have had their own payroll department. Now they go through MS payroll. Why do you need an entire department whose job is now superfluous? Obviously this gets a LOT more complex with developers and the like (as well as local management) but that is the mindset.

But… holy fucking shit that is a lot of people getting laid off at one of the worst times to be unemployed in “tech” in the past decade.

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14 points

Yeah, it’s brutal out there right now. Reminds me of 2008 or 2000.

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14 points

Similar to 2008 but the 1% found out a way to keep their wealth intact while still fucking everyone else over.

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11 points

In 2008, those responsible got the rest of us to bail them out and give billions in bonuses.

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3 points

There should be some sort of law that hits exec’s options, RSUs and bonuses if their financial for a business division aren’t total trash. Example, eBay, which grew and still laid people off.

That said, this one I kind of get. Mergers and acquisitions create literal redundancies. You end up with duplicates of people and departments.

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1 point

Corporate can’t see the difference

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64 points
*

It is indeed a lot of people. A quick search says ABK employed 17,000 people. Laying over over 10% of your workforce is… intense, to say the least. Though, how much of that 1,900 is just from ABK is hard to say, so the percentage could be lower.

You’re right though; HR, payroll, legal, and social media/PR departments would definitely be among the first on the chopping block, depending on how much MS wants to integrate ABK into their existing departments.

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43 points

Finance too. They’re almost always first from the multiple I’ve personally been through. The new owners want those hands out of the pot asap.

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40 points

Also considering the apparent toxicity of certain Blizzard employees it’s probably a good opportunity to “purge” the Kotic gang and his following.

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13 points

So that’s a dozen people. 1900 is more than a hundred times that. (#mathFTW)

These cuts will seriously hurt product.

Also, I sense my less-than-new windows version will be unsupported; and I only had it so the one game ran better.

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11 points
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Blizzard Products were polished turds.

They need a huge cultural shift and I’m all for it.

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1 point

Oh it’s ok since competition is getting killed too. See you soon at the bottom of the barrel.

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-4 points

This is GOOD for bitcoin!

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16 points

Hence why acquisitions need more scrutiny. It literally kills jobs.

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1 point
*

In this case, it kills unproductive jobs. Payroll people are necessary but at the end of the day, they don’t produce anything you would want to buy. This means that if you keep more administrative jobds than you need, there will be fewer actuall things to go around. Hence everyone will be poorer on average (or realistically speaking, the rich will be poorer in the current system, but that is a different issue).

Anyway, keeping unproductive jobds to reduce unenployment is a dumb idea and is one of the main reason why communism sucked so much.

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1 point

I have a better idea. Fire the whole payroll division and hire just one accountant. Since clearly, clearly, any number of payroll employees can sustain any company size, this is the most cost efficient way to go.

Oh you say one staff in payroll is not enough? Oh then I miss your point.

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3 points

Yeah, I’m a bit skeptical that this is just about “downsizing” or eliminating redundant positions after the acquisition. Based on what I’ve seen on Twitter, a lot of junior, middle, and senior level positions were victims of these cuts, across a ton of different departments. Animators, artists, developers, no one was safe. Apparently like the entire Overwatch lore team was cut - you can’t tell me that team has any overlap whatsoever with any existing Microsoft employees.

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3 points
*

That gets into the mess of what the reality of “gaming” is. Most people will acknowledge that Call of Duty and… uhm… Halo? Sure, let’s go with that. CoD and Halo compete. They are both games in a similar genre. Same with the hilarity of Horizon Zero Dawn meaning that a critically acclaimed open world game is coming out.

But the reality is that CoD and Fortnite compete with Squid Game and Reacher. Breath of the Wild competes with both Elden Ring AND The World Cup. The resource is increasingly time. When people get home from work they generally aren’t saying “I am going to play three hours of video games and it will either be Battlebit or CoD”. They are saying “I have three hours so maybe I’ll watch an episode or two of Demon Slayer or I could do my dailies in Fifa?”

And, in that regard, Overwatch is an increasingly “failed” live service game with an IP that has lots almost all of its good will. Whereas Halo… Master Chief had a sweet ass? But Overwatch DOES compete with the other big live game that MS acquired alongside them… Call of Duty. And so forth.

Its all a giant mess where labor suffers. But… yeah.

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25 points

My initial reaction was to laugh my ass off at the extra drop of crap in the collective cup. Upon a second take however… considering what a horrifying den of depravity ActiBlizz became during the past years, this may turn out to be for the best in the long run…

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12 points

Yeah those coders and artists had it coming!

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5 points

Not slighting the dismissal of those who didn’t partake, don’t get me wrong! Every situation has nuance, not denying that! I was referring to the overall culture which took root there, and from that the purely utilitarian observation that it’s easier to change the mentality if you change the people (in one way or another).

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-2 points

Mass layoffs is going to make it worse, not better.

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9 points

Jesse McCree ?

It’s not like it was only managers that were dirty.

Surely there was a management enabling it but it seemed widespread at Blizzard.

Now for the 99% others that lost their job for no reasons. That’s another story.

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