Blizzard among first AAA developers to “recognize” unionization

Anyone who follows news and drama in the gaming industry is probably familiar with the fact that a lot of it is related to Activision Blizzard. In fact, there has been so much drama that it was quite difficult to keep up with it at one point.

The company is infamous for treating its employees extremely poorly. Sexual harassment, workplace toxicity, stealing breast milk, and even driving an employee to suicide are just a few extremes of how far down things have gone. With the higher-ups having too much power in the company, and being virtually untouchable, it was only a matter of time until the workers decided to create a union.

Blizzard Workers

Creation of the Game Workers Alliance union

While most of the drama, including all kinds of horrible things was throughout 2020 and 2021, the straw that broke the camel’s back for the employees of the company was somewhere in December 2021, when workers went on a strike to protest planned layoffs.

In January, the QA employees of Activision Blizzard announced that they were planning to form a union.

Of course, Activision Blizzard was resisting these efforts of unionization by declining to recognize the union, which, to be fair, is expected from a toxic company like Activision Blizzard. They actually contested the National Labor Relations Board filing, saying that all employees should be included in the union and not just the QA department, and to their surprise, the National Labor Relations Board still let the union become a thing.

To make the matter for Activision Blizzard worse, Microsoft’s Phil Spencer said that they would accept the union once the deal with Blizzard was completed. Naturally, after the future big boss hinted that they should stop mistreating their workers, the union finally became a thing (which it would have to anyway, due to the National Labor Relations Board, but probably a bit later).

Now the company will actually have to listen and negotiate with the workers at Activision Blizzard,

Esports.net