Microsoft has rejected the Federal Trade Commission's recent complaints about the mass layoffs at Activision. The regulator previously argued that the move could be used as the basis for reversing Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard, which was completed in October 2023.
Just three months later, Microsoft announced major layoffs, revealing intentions to eliminate around 1,900 positions across its three main game publishing arms: ABK, ZeniMax Media, and Xbox Game Studios. Although the move was framed as a company-wide initiative, subsequent reports from industry insiders and the affected staffers have suggested that the vast majority of those redundancies were identified at the tech giant's newest subsidiary, Activision Blizzard.
A February 7 letter to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit subsequently saw the FTC argue Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard can be reversed because the tech giant previously gave assurances that it would not need to resort to such workforce cutbacks if the $68.7 billion transaction was approved. In an electronic filing submitted a day later, Microsoft rejected that train of thought as misleading, arguing that Activision was already planning to eliminate a «significant number» of positions prior to the acquisition.
The tech giant made no attempt to expand on how «significant» those planned redundancies actually were. It has instead characterized the cutbacks as keeping up in line with «broader» industry trends. For reference, even the most conservative estimates suggest that thousands of people working in game development have lost their jobs since early 2023. One industry veteran recently described the current state of gaming as a «disaster zone» for professionals trying to make a living.
Consistent with broader trends in the gaming industry, Activision was already planning on eliminating a significant number of jobs while still operating as an independent company.
Microsoft concluded that given the macro trends
Read more on gamerant.com