The director of Baldur’s Gate 3, Swen Vincke, was one of many to speak out on the recent mass layoffs within the video games industry at an industry awards show last night, blaming the job losses on corporate “greed” that had been “fucking this whole thing up for so long”.

  • Hovenko
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    222 months ago

    I wanna give that guy a no homo kiss on left buttcheek.

  • @[email protected]
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    162 months ago

    Well it‘s good for Larian though. If they really want to release a game bigger than BG3 in 4 years or less like they announced, they‘ll have to tripple their workforce. There must be a lot of great talent searching for a job right now for Larian to pick up.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      Let’s hope Vincke (or someone who shares his values) remains in charge. Larian is one of the gems right now, and I’m looking forward to seeing what else they make.

  • @[email protected]
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    102 months ago

    I mean the entire business structure for publicly traded companies is about greed so the results are not shocking. More need to avoid getting shareholders in the first place as while it may help to get things going, it will suck the life out of any real value made even to its own long term detriment.

  • Ulu-Mulu-no-die
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    52 months ago

    It’s not only the game industry unfortunately, it’s every industry everywhere.

    It’s public trading - and all the financial speculations around it - that ruins companies, forcing them to earn more and spend less year after year, and when they have nothing else left to cut, they start cutting the workforce, with all the bad repercussions Swen described, like loss of institutional knowledge for example.

    It’s a financial model that’s totally unsustainable, noone can grow indefinitely, they should change the way companies are valued, not looking at quarterly profits but a number of other parameters like respect for the environment for example, security, financial stability, things like that.

    It won’t happen tho so the only option today to be a good company is avoiding public trading, not many entrepreneurs are smart enough, or unselfish enough, to do it.