The number of people playing Starfield on Steam has slipped under the concurrent player count for the 12-year-old Skyrim, just two months after Bethesda proclaimed the sci-fi exploration epic as their biggest game launch to date.
26.10.2023 - 21:33 / pcgamer.com / Phil Spencer / Pete Hines / Matt Booty
Just a couple of weeks after finishing its acquisition of Activision Blizzard, Microsoft is making some changes to its Xbox studio structure. In an internal memo acquired by The Verge, Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer said Xbox Game Studios head Matt Booty is being promoted to president of game content and studios, a role that will put him in charge of ZeniMax and its subsidiary studios, including Bethesda Softworks.
«ZeniMax will continue to operate as a limited integration entity led by Jamie Leder, President and CEO, reporting to Matt,» Spencer wrote. «All ZeniMax development studios and ZeniMax Central Services teams will continue reporting to Jamie to maintain and optimize current content development and production cycles. Also, to deepen our partnership and accelerate mutual learning, a number of ZeniMax leaders will now report to those Microsoft leaders with whom their work most closely aligns.»
Spencer didn't mention it by name, but there's a feeling that this reorganization is at least in part aimed at helping avoid another Redfall situation. The multiplayer FPS developed by Arkane was one of the biggest bombs of 2023—less than six months after launch, only 30 people are playing it on Steam right now—and it came to light not long after it launched that Arkane was equally unenthusiastic about it. A Bloomberg report revealed that employees at Arkane Austin hoped the Microsoft acquisition would result in either a reboot of the project, or an outright cancellation. Neither happened: Instead, Microsoft allowed ZeniMax to go about its business, which resulted in a mass exodus of veteran employees from the studio and, well, Redfall.
It's clear that those days of cowboying around are over. «Great games are fundamental to everything we do,» Spencer wrote. «We believe that an expanded gaming content organization—one that enables Xbox Game Studios and ZeniMax’s development studios to collaborate effectively together—will empower those world-class studios to do their best work in growing our portfolio of games players love.»
I'm not a big fan of too much direction from the top, but in this case it might be the right move. It's not as though Microsoft is immune to stumbles (just look at Halo: Infinite) but 2023 has not been a good year for Bethesda. Redfall is the obvious blot on the ledger but even Starfield didn't live up to pre-release hype: It's a perfectly fine Bethesda open-world RPG (and, to be clear, we liked it) and by all reports a big sales hit. But it was also routine, and didn't deliver the expansive sci-fi epic we were looking forward to.
The restructuring comes just over a week after the retirement of Pete Hines, formerly Bethesda's head of publishing and its most public face—basically the
The number of people playing Starfield on Steam has slipped under the concurrent player count for the 12-year-old Skyrim, just two months after Bethesda proclaimed the sci-fi exploration epic as their biggest game launch to date.
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By Tom Warren, a senior editor covering Microsoft, PC gaming, console, and tech. He founded WinRumors, a site dedicated to Microsoft news, before joining The Verge in 2012.
Xbox boss Phil Spencer wasn't aware of the changes and is now looking into it.
The shape of Microsoft’s gaming efforts is obviously going to change in significant ways in the coming months and years courtesy of its acquisition of Activision Blizzard, and part of that is already being put in motion, starting with the company having reorganized its Xbox leadership team, as reported by The Verge.
Over two years after acquiring ZeniMax and Bethesda, Microsoft has now incorporated some of the developer's management into its own leadership team. Internal emails obtained by The Verge reveal a reorganization that further integrates the two companies and "sustains the momentum" of Microsoft's recent Activision Blizzard acquisition.
Microsoft has announced some pretty significant leadership and organizational changes in the gaming segment today, as reported by The Verge.
Former Skyrim lead designer Bruce Nesmith left Bethesda, and his updated role as senior systems designer, partway through Starfield's development, so he was as surprised as the rest of us when the massive space RPG was released in remarkably good condition.
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