«Hey, kid—Psst! Ya wanna buy some… um, some kinda Smash Bros.-style brawler with a buncha cartoon characters? How about a live service Harley Quinn game? Where ya goin' kid, hey kid I'm talking!» So goes the first scene of my unpublished script «Warner Bros. has a rough 2024 in games,» which opens with panicked crowds fleeing the WB executive suites while the suits pursue, their pockets bulging with unsold pre-order bonuses.
Suicide Squad may be the poster child, with WB Games chalking up an eye-watering $200 million loss to the game, but it now turns out the whole Multiversus saga is responsible for another huge dent in the balance sheet.
On a recent call discussing the company's results, Warner Bros. Discovery president and CEO David Zaslav and chief financial officer Gunnar Wiedenfels said that the $200 million writedown is now a $300 million writedown, and laid the blame squarely on Multiversus.
«We took another $100 million plus impairment due to the underperforming releases, primarily MultiVersus this quarter,» said Widenfels (thanks IGN), «bringing total writedown year-to-date to over $300 million in our games business, a key factor in this year’s studio profit decline.»
Zaslav sought to mollify those on the shareholding side that WB does, in fact, «recognise [the games business] is substantially underperforming its potential right now.» Revenues this quarter were down 31% year-on-year, not least because at this point in 2023 Hogwarts Legacy was on its way to becoming the best-selling game of the year worldwide.
On the same call Zaslav said that WB would be «focusing our development efforts on those core franchises, with proven studios to improve our success ratio.» Rocksteady was a pretty proven studio to my mind, but whatever. The four franchises he identified were DC («in particular Batman»), Hogwarts Legacy, Mortal Kombat, and Game of Thrones.
«We're through some of the worst—and it hasn't been pretty on the gaming business—but we have four games that are
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