Destiny 2 dev Bungie facing layoffs

Destiny 2Bungie, a developer of video games and other digital products, is planning to lay off an unknown number of employees. Bungie CEO Pete Parsons announced this Monday following employee complaints on social media.

Reached for comment, a Bungie representative pointed Polygon to Parsons’ statement on XThe layoffs were not clarified. Several ex-Bungie staffers have posted to social media sites like X or LinkedIn, sharing the news of the layoffs. The layoffs appear to be spread across Bungie’s community and social teams, marketing, legal, recruiting, art, human resources, quality assurance, and elsewhere.

“Today is a sad day at Bungie as we say goodbye to colleagues who have all made a significant impact on our studio,” Parsons wrote. “What these exceptional individuals have contributed to our games and Bungie culture has been enormous and will continue to be a part of Bungie long into the future.” (Parsons’ post has received hundreds of responses on X, several of which have been critical, using phrases like “tone deaf” to describe Parsons’ statement.)

Sony Interactive Entertainment bought Bungie from Bungie, in 2022 for $3.6 Billion. PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan, who is stepping down from the company in March, said at the time that the studio “will remain independent and multi-platform [and] will enjoy creative freedom.” A Washington Post report published days after the acquisition said Bungie leadership told staff there would no “absolutely no layoffs” as a result of the acquisition. Sony also announced that it intended to spend $1.2 billion on employee retention — “deferred payments to employee shareholders, conditional upon their continued employment, and other retention incentives,” per Sony’s February 2022 earnings report.

Bungie’s layoffs on Monday come during a disastrous time period for game industry workers: Thousands of people have been laid off this year. Fortnite maker Epic Games laid off more than 800 employees in September; Epic CEO Tim Sweeney said the company has been spending more than it’s making. Embracer, a conglomerate that is known for quickly acquiring studios and games, has been cutting back on jobs. Embracer closed down Volition, which developed Saints Row. Hundreds of employees were laid off.

It’s not only the massive companies engaging in layoffs, though: Companies of varying sizes have been part of the troubling trend, like Telltale Games, which cut jobs in October, and Immortals Of AveumAscendant Games has laid off more than half its workforce since September.

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