Kane
I have many names
Tan Densdale from Twisted Pixel has nothing better to do than looking at other people, specifically where and why they were fired.
The result of his study:
http://penny-arcade.com/report/article/na
The result of his study:
"Looking at the the raw number of people affected, MMO teams laid off more developers than console teams," Teasdale argues. He notes that 38% of video game industry layoffs hit MMO studios, although only 26% of MMO studios did any firing. Layoffs in Boston and Austin, including the closure of 38 Studios, accounted for a third of all industry layoffs, which could look good or bad depending on the total number of studios in those two cities relative to the rest of the industry (info hard to come by and not included in the study).
One upshot of the report was that MMO studios tended to lay off fewer people when firings happened in comparison to social, mobile, and console studios. "While this probably isn't a surprise, it's a clear indication that it's way harder to survive as a social or MMO developer than a console developer," he concludes. However, the analysis does not break down the types of employees laid off, such as designers vs. support, community, and temporary contractors, roles common in the MMO industry.
Teasdale readily admits his work has some limitations. "We can't normalize the data to show how much console gaming shrank as a percentage compared to other segments, since we don't know have a breakdown of 'total console developers' or 'total MMO developers'," he writes. "There were more console closures, but there are more console studios to start off with." He was also forced to define studios by their primary focus, meaning that a hypothetical 60% MMO/40% PC studio that laid off its PC workforce was likely counted among MMO layoffs.
http://penny-arcade.com/report/article/na