Microsoft's 10,000 Employee Layoff Sees Massive Cuts in Gaming Division Handling the Development of Halo

Per Bloomberg

Microsoft has recently announced that it would be laying off 10,000 employees, representing just a little less than 5% of the company. Now, word has gone out regarding how the job cuts will affect the company's video-game division, specifically the developers of the beloved classic Halo.

The announcement of Microsoft comes shortly after the company announced it would be giving its employees unlimited time offs with ten corporate holidays, mental health time offs, sick leaves, and leaves of absence. The news says the company will spend $1.2 billion to let go of 10,000 employees.

This also comes at a time that the company is in talks of investing $10 billion with OpenAI, the company behind the popular ChatGPT AI tool. OpenAI is also popular for its Dall-E 2 tool, the AI image generator.

As the company is pushing through with its layoffs, one department that will be affected is the video-game division, with even the developers of Halo and Starfield no longer safe. Microsoft is the maker of Xbox and Halo is arguably one of its best games, even during the earlier days.

The layoffs will affect people at Bethesda Game Studios and 343 Industries. Bethesda Game Studios is still building the upcoming Starfield game, while 343 Industries is the 2021 Halo Infinite game developer.

Some individuals who lost their jobs were veterans with over a decade of experience working with Xbox, per anonymous sources. Pierre Hintze, head of 343 Industries, gave a statement regarding Microsoft's decision.

Hintze: “(Microsoft) made the difficult decision to restructure elements of our team, which means some roles are being eliminated.”

The layoff of developers comes a year after Microsoft's plan to buy Activision Blizzard Inc has not yet been approved. The deal remained stalemate as the US Federal Trade Commission is still investigating the possible acquisition.

So far, the deal is still pending regulatory approval, and there has not been much news of progress over a year after Microsoft expressed its intent.

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Bloomberg