It’s a sad case of another day, another round of mass layoffs at a game studio. On this occasion, Destiny developer Bungie has announced it is letting go of 220 employees, or 17% of its workforce. CEO Pete Parsons said the eliminations were due to “financial challenges,” which isn’t going down well, especially after it was discovered he may have spent over $2.4 million on classic cars after Sony acquired the company, and continued buying them even after the previous layoffs.

Bungie blames the job eliminations on “rising costs of development and industry shifts as well as enduring economic conditions.” The Sony subsidiary says it needs to make substantial changes to its cost structure and focus development efforts entirely on Destiny and Marathon.

The cuts will impact every level of the company, including executives and senior leader roles – but not Parsons, obviously.

It was only in October 2023 that Bungie made its last round of layoffs, and the news comes just under two months since the launch of Destiny 2: The Final Shape, which has been well-received.

In December, Bungie devs told IGN that the atmosphere at the company was “soul-crushing” due to fears of more layoffs, extra cost-cutting measures, and a loss of all independence from Sony if Bungie’s financials did not improve. Staff said earlier this year that they feared more job cuts were coming.

The latest layoffs have led to many angry posts on social media from current and former Bungie employees. Destiny 2’s global community lead Dylan Gafner (AKA dmg04) called the move “inexcusable,” and noted that it’s a case of “Accountability falling upon the workers who have pushed the needle to deliver for our community time and time again.”

What’s angering people even further is the discovery of what seems to be Parsons’ account on a car bidding site called Bring a Trailer. It shows he has spent $2.4 million on classic cars since September 2022, which includes $500,000 since the October layoffs.

  • @_pete_
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    265 months ago

    Destiny was supposed to be their “forever” game, the problem is that after 2 dozen expansions:

    1. New players are extremely intimidated about joining
    2. Old players dislike losing the content they’ve paid for when it’s vaulted
    3. Long term players will eventually get bored of playing the same thing they’ve been playing for years

    Live service games just won’t last forever like they want them to.

    • @brucethemoose
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      85 months ago

      Precisely.

      Developing one MMO forever is not a great strategy, and I’d argue they aren’t executing it like the Warframe devs (which is its direct competitor I guess).

    • @[email protected]
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      35 months ago

      I’m fine with content being vaulted to make room for new content. What I have an issue with is when the new content isn’t even half of the quality of what they removed. I quit playing shortly after menagerie was removed for exactly that reason.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        I exited with a “lol no” when I saw the state of lightfall. So glad I did.

        It’s still a shame for the devs. Quite talented people, it’s once again a case of major management fuck up and devs paying the bill…

        • @[email protected]
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          25 months ago

          Quite talented people, it’s once again a case of major management fuck up and devs paying the bill…

          Workers pay the price for mistakes made by the C-Suite.

    • Pika
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      5 months ago

      not to mention their response to accounts hacked is “lol get fucked” they /might/ give you access but they refuse to do any rollbacks or anything even if it isn’t your fault. Shitty company with shitty practices. Was destined to fail eventually.

      • @Astronauticaldb
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        15 months ago

        They do have a pretty sound reasoning for that though. Recoveries (which are services where someone better at the game than you logs into your account to play on your behalf) are a big thing in games like D2, and are also against their ToS. The tl;dr is that if you give your account information to someone and they play your game, and just so happen to cheat, that’s your fault for giving your information away.

        • Pika
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          5 months ago

          yea im not talking that though, it’s bad buisness sense to not assist your customer with recovering their account in terms of a break in. That customer is no longer going to spend money or even play your game anymore. I know of a few people who rarely touch Destiny anymore, one of them was a past ambassador of the game due to the shitty security setup of destiny’s third party integration allowing someone to hijack the account and then destroy it.

          It takes almost no effort to just roll the account back and anything that was related to it, it’s all logged as they have to do so for the inventory system to properly work with the market. This would be a relatively simple process with almost no cons to the company or the buisness, but they would rather just hope that the player will spend money again on shit, and that’s not including the time limited shit you can’t get back. Complete disregard to your user base is a huge turnoff for me.