• Hdcase@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Supposedly the whole Fall Guys team at Mediatonic, who Epic just acquired, were let go. Including the game director.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m sure the Fall Guys owner who sold it is happy. Made bank and all it cost them was the livelihoods of all the people who made the game.

  • CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Sucks for the low level employees losing their jobs, but I can’t possibly feel bad about Epic losing money. Garbage company that needs to lose their grip on the industry after the shit they pulled with Epic Game Store and buying up games/studios just to delist their games from Steam, axe the Linux support, and make them exclusives on the worst platform in gaming.

  • thingsiplay@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Company was ‘spending way more than we earn,’ CEO said in memo

    It needs a genius to see that. All those contracts for timed exclusivity, all those games given for free. Most people just play free to play games on the platform and get the games for free. I thought the idea was to eat the cost and spend more money than to earn, so they can build a loyal customer base. If that wasn’t the entire goal, what was it then? Why punish the staff (holy cow its 870 employees!) by cutting them off the company now? The store and launcher of Epic games already struggle to get better.

    Unfortunately I can’t read the article on Bloomberg, as it requires an account.

    • Thrashy@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      All these companies that are suddenly having layoffs and/or enshittifying everything at once all shared the same basic business model (pardon the Bronze Age meme format from Slashdot…):

      • Give goods or services away for free
      • Attract customers on the basis of getting goods or services for free
      • ???
      • Profit!

      Years of basically free debt service and stupid VC money let them kick the can down the road for a long time in terms of figuring out what Step 3 was gonna be, up to the point that many such services didn’t even bother, replacing both Steps 3 and 4 with “Sell to whichever FAANG is sucker enough to think they can leverage our userbase for their own product.” High interest rates have suddenly put a stop to the money party, though, and now they’re all scrambling to find ways of aggressively monetizing their services.

    • LoamImprovement@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I’m guessing it was the goal but it didn’t work as well as they’d hoped. I’ve got a couple of the freebies but I’ve stuck mostly with Valve because most of my games are already on Steam and they haven’t seriously fucked up yet.

      • ampersandrew@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        They made enticing incentives for developers and publishers, but what incentive would I have as a customer to buy a game from EGS rather than Steam or GOG or even Humble?

        • LoamImprovement@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          I’m guessing here because I don’t sit on Epic’s board of directors, but I would imagine their angle for consumers was mostly to grab new markets with the appeal of free games, which would also establish a library that would be a pain point if they ever wanted to move away, coupled with some of those one-year exclusives that would peel people away from Valve if they wanted to play them day-of.

          • ampersandrew@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            But there are so many features built in to Steam that if even one or two of them are important to you, there’s less of a reason to ever default to someone else doing the same thing but less so. Like with GOG, they don’t match Steam feature for feature, but DRM-free and easy preservation of previous versions of games are good selling points that matter to people.

            • YuzuDrink@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              Epic would need to have a “import your games and achievements and saves from Steam” feature AND THEN ALSO have a much better performing app than they currently do, for me to convert. But years later and EGS is still a pretty awful user experience compared to Steam. There’s just no way.

              • luciferofastora@lemmy.zip
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                1 year ago

                For me, it’d also need a Linux compatibility layer on par with (or exceeding that of) Steam. On paper, I’m not a fan of Valve’s exclusive hold on that market, but in practice nothing has come close for me so far (that I know of, at least).

                I tried Lutris and Wine, but I had difficulties getting stuff to run, and the fixes required patience and some level of technical understanding (of Wine, specifically, not just Linux in general). They just don’t have the same (comparatively simple) convenience of “check ProtonDB before you buy it, download game, run it, and usually it’ll work fine”.

                The more advanced fixes usually involve nothing more than a few well-documented steps like copy/pasting a launch command, selecting something in a dropdown or downloading and extracting a file into some directory. It’s not a universal “It Just Works”, but I feel like it’s been getting better and better, and that’s just a headstart any competitor would have to work really hard to catch up with.

  • gk99@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I imagine this is a mix of things. UE5 has officially been out for a while, their biggest competitor just offed themselves, Fortnite’s UE editor support is out and thus Fortnite probably doesn’t need as many devs now with UGC to pick up the slack, etc.

    That’s still a huge chunk of people though. Wonder if all these financial gambles they’ve taken are starting to add up.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      I don’t know what it costs Epic to grab all these “exclusives”, and I know lots of people (myself included) who just wait and get whatever it is on Steam anyway. It can’t cost nothing, and it doesn’t seem to be terribly good business.

      Likewise, devs must make something when Epic offers a game for free (I think?).

      It does seem to me like a deep-pockets game, and I’m not sure how deep Epic’s are anymore.

      • LoamImprovement@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Honestly they’ll have money as long as people keep playing fortnite, kids are throwing stupid money at skins and shit.

  • MudMan@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Yeah, so… being in the gaming industry really sucks right now.

    Go give a hug to your local gamedev. They probably need it.

    • MJBrune@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been 10 years in the industry and honestly. This feels familiar. I feel like there was mass layoffs about 4+ years ago. There was also the Boston Games collapse around 2013. I’ve been told this industry has a very direct pattern. Expand, contract, expand, contract. What you want to do is to get into it when it’s expanding and hope by the time it contracts you have enough experience to be vital to a project.

      • MudMan@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        And before that in the big 2008 crisis, sure. And, to put forth a silver lining, layoffs tends to get a lot of press and happen all at once, while people start new projects and get new jobs all the time without making headlines.

        It still sucks to see social media erupt in lost job notifications every so often, though.

        I think this time bothers me more because… well, there isn’t much reason for it. Mostly everything blew up during the pandemic, a lot of money was made and now things are going back to baseline. But public companies will NEVER report they’re shrinking if they can help it, and if they do they will try to appear to be becoming cheaper to compensate, so the obvious call is to let go of a bunch of people you were mostly hoarding anwyay.

        The takeaway here, if you ask me, is to never have loyatly for an employer, at least when it comes to moving on to a different job or ask for better conditions. This sort of thing happens all the time and especially publicly traded companies will not hesitate to cut you loose if it makes business sense. You have less leverage, so the thing to do is a) bargain collectively to get more of that leverage, and b) treat your labour negotiations with the company with the same business sense they do.

        In the meantime, I still recommend hugging a developer. Patting lightly the back of the head could also be acceptable. Just ask for a preference first.

        • MJBrune@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Loyalty to a company is silly. A lot of people in games learn that quickly in their career because they want to go work for some huge name-brand company that they grew up with just for them to either harshly reject or if they actually get the job, they end up in a crunch cycle trying to prove themselves.

          That said people do have loyalty, to other people and to projects. People are passionate about working with people they like and on projects they care about. You only get to make like 20-30 games in your career. Even then that includes all the games that didn’t release. It only really allows for 2-3 years per game whereas lots of games are 5+ years. Projects and people matter a lot and it’s important to not just chase money. Otherwise, you end up working at Google Stadia or Amazon.

          • MudMan@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Well, yeah, but that bit comes in between the buisness bits. Most managers do care about the people working there, too, but ultimately that will not drive the decisionmaking when it comes to the business, paritcularly in public companies with an obligation to shareholders. It’s only fair to reciprocate.

            So absolutely be loyal to your team and your project, but never at the expense of your working conditions or compensation.

            That’s one of the reasons why collective bargaining is important. Short of having representation, like they do on the film business, you want to compartimentalize somehow, and having a designated representative to negottiate with everybody else behind them is a way to get there.

  • GrindingGears@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    This is why people really have to start caring about who they work for, and professionally represent. It’s a tough, very unfair lesson to learn unfortunately. But if the company you are working for starts acting unethically, trust me (as someone who has learned the hard way), it’s a slippery slope that quickly has no bottom.

    Of course the little guy pays the price here, as usual, and my sincere hope is that they all quickly bounce back into better roles.

    As for Epic? I hope their bottoms have no bottom.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think we need more worker protections. Mandatory severance, can’t fire without cause.

      A lot of people don’t get much choice who they work for. Basic devs and QA and now out of as job and need to scramble to find another job. It’s nice some of these are getting severance but it’s not mandatory nor the norm in America.

      • GrindingGears@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        You always have a choice in who you work for. I’m not saying sometimes this choice doesn’t get frustratingly complicated, it does. But you always ultimately have that choice. More worker protections aren’t going to do shit either, too many peeons are brainwashed to ever successfully see it through, and with more regulations come more loopholes.

        Nope, the only thing that’s going to work, is if people finally wake the hell up, and grow a pair to collectively do something about it. Might never be possible, but if it isn’t, well stuff like this isn’t ever going to change. What if the entire staff of Epic, in response, just decided to not show up tomorrow onwards? Stood the line through all the threats…Epic would quickly be in very big trouble. The buck would end there, and change would get forced.