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Just Cause maker announces layoffs, closes two studios

DATE POSTED:June 3, 2024
The hero of Just Cause holsters a bazooka as he watches a tremendous explosion it caused in the over-the-top action adventure by Avalanche Studios

It’s still a terrible year for employment in the video games development industry.

Monday, Sweden-based Avalanche Studios Group, makers of the just-optioned-to-Hollywood Just Cause action franchise, said it was cutting 9 percent of its workforce.

That may not sound like a lot but Avalanche now has three locations, Stockholm, Liverpool, and Malmo, Sweden. Studios in New York and Montreal have been shut down entirely. The Montreal operation had only been open for eight months. GameSpot pointed out that Avalanche’s Swedish operations recently unionized.

“Our focus is now on supporting all Avalanchers through this challenging time,” the studios’ leadership said in a statement. “We’re grateful for the invaluable contributions of those leaving and remain committed to creating incredible gaming experiences for our players.”

The next commitment they must honor is a game called Contraband which, similar to Just Cause, is an action-adventure set in an anything-goes tropical banana republic. The game does not yet have a release date but it is committed to a day-and-date launch on Xbox Game Pass.

Video game makers keep laying off developers each quarter

Video games development has been put through a grinder of late. At the beginning of May, Xbox closed the development studios behind Redfall (Arkane Austin) and Ghostwire: Tokyo (Tango Gameworks), both of which were tasked to deliver first-party content to Xbox Game Pass and drive subscriptions and engagement there.

Earlier in the year, Microsoft eliminated 1,900 development jobs in its Xbox division and from the freshly acquired Activision Blizzard, despite surpassing Apple as the world’s richest company, valued at more than $3 trillion.

Elsewhere, Relic Entertainment, maker of Company of Heroes, announced layoffs, and Take-Two Interactive, makers of the money-printing Grand Theft Auto and NBA 2K franchises, said it would fire another 5 percent of its workforce to save investors $165 million.

The post Just Cause maker announces layoffs, closes two studios appeared first on ReadWrite.