Miscellaneous

Microsoft to cut down 1900 jobs from Xbox and Activision Blizzard

As reported by Bloomberg, Microsoft is gearing up to cut 1,900 jobs in its video-game units, and this includes Activision Blizzard. It’s worth noting that Microsoft had just sealed the deal to acquire Activision for a whopping $69 billion late last year.

According to an internal email seen by Bloomberg, Phil Spencer, the head honcho of gaming at Microsoft, spilled the beans that these job cuts make up around 8 percent of the company’s gaming workforce of 22,000. This news was first reported by The Verge, pointing out that other gaming giants like Riot Games have also gone ahead with substantial workforce reductions.

Phil Spencer emphasized in the email, “Together, we’ve set priorities, identified areas of overlap, and ensured that we’re all aligned on the best opportunities for growth.”

Blizzard Entertainment is in for some big changes as part of the shake-up. This includes nixing a survival game called Odyssey. On top of that, the company is saying goodbye to its President, Mike Ybarra, and Chief Design Officer, Allen Adham, who also happens to be one of the co-founders of Blizzard Entertainment.

Ybarra, who had previously talked about being committed to Blizzard for the long haul, made it official that he’s leaving in a post on X. He said, “Having already spent 20+ years at Microsoft and with the acquisition of Activision Blizzard behind us, it’s time for me to (once again) become Blizzard’s biggest fan from the outside.”

Just three months after Microsoft sealed the deal with Activision Blizzard, they’re making changes to the workforce. In an email to the staff, Activision Publishing chief, Rob Kostich, spilled the beans, saying the cuts were made “to reset and re-align our resources for the future.”

Over 60 tech companies, with heavyweights like Amazon.com and Google’s parent Alphabet in the mix, have let go of around 11,000 employees in the tech industry this year. This info is from Layoffs.fyi, the platform keeping tabs on job cuts in the tech sector. Microsoft is set to spill the beans on its quarterly earnings on January 30.

Rohan Sharma

Recent Posts

Best Video Editing Software For PC

Video editing is one of the most in-demand skills in today’s content creation era. If…

8 months ago

Samsung planning to introduce blood glucose monitoring with Galaxy Watch 7

There have been whispers about Samsung's ambition to equip their wearable gadgets with a neat trick:…

8 months ago

TSMC to lock horns with Intel with its A16 chip manufacturing tech

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) recently dropped the news that they're gearing up to kick off production…

8 months ago

Is ChatGPT accurate and should we believe what it says?

Modern chatbots like ChatGPT can churn out dozens of words per second, making them incredibly…

8 months ago

Mark Zuckerberg claims Meta is years away from making money through gen AI

The race for generative AI is in full swing, but don't count on it raking…

8 months ago

How JioCinema’s dirt cheap plans can mean trouble for Netflix, Amazon Prime

JioCinema, the famous Indian on-demand video-streaming service, unveiled a new monthly subscription plan, starting at…

8 months ago