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An investigative report into the biggest video game flop of 2019 tells a familiar story about poor working conditions in the industry
An investigative report into the biggest video game flop of 2019 tells a familiar story about poor working conditions in the industry
Kevin WebbApr 5, 2019, 01:39 IST
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Despite being the best-selling video game of February 2019, "Anthem" suffered through a tumultuous launch and has drawn the ire of players and critics alike.
An investigative report from Kotaku exploring the game's development process found that many of the game's creators at BioWare reportedly endured intense stress and suffered emotional breakdowns as they struggled to finish the game.
The reported turmoil within the "Anthem" development team mirrors similar stories from other game studios, and has ignited discussions about proper work standards in the video game industry.
The creators of "Anthem" are on the defensive after an investigative report from Kotaku shed new light on the game's troubled development process.
Kotaku's Jason Schrier reported on the working conditions at BioWare during "Anthem's" creation, discovering that employees at BioWare reportedly suffered from intense mental and emotional stress as they struggled to complete the game on schedule.
"Anthem" was a much different game when the development process began in 2014. The project took on several different names as BioWare solidified the core elements of the game. The game officially launched on February 15th with a sliding release schedule, and suffered a tumultuous first month: players reported game-breaking bugs and criticized "Anthem's" lack of content.
A blockbuster budget and aggressive marketing campaign from Electronic Arts helped make "Anthem" the best-selling video game of February, but the product is considered a resounding flop in its current form.
"Anthem" was a very different game in the early stages of development, but technical difficulties reportedly changed the course of the project.
Early iterations of "Anthem" were about surviving the hostile environment of an alien planet; the final product focuses more on fighting through enemy encounters and finding increasingly powerful weapons. The development team reportedly ran into technical difficulties that limited the scope of the game.
Multiple BioWare developers told Schrier that they faced repeated issues building the game with Frostbite, the in-house software kit owned by Electronic Arts. While the team wanted to implement special effects like dynamic weather, they struggled to implement their ambitious ideas with Frostbite, they said. Many felt that the software was ill-equipped to handle a large adventure game like "Anthem."
“People were so angry and sad all the time,” they said. Said another: “Depression and anxiety are an epidemic within Bioware.”
Co-signed me, a person who left BioWare in 2017 with massive depression and anxiety that has taken me a while to get through and recover from.
Multiple BioWare employees reportedly broke down due to mental and emotional stress during development.
The technical difficulties and tight deadline eventually had an impact on morale at BioWare, Kotaku reports. Members of the creative team told Schrier anonymously that they worked long hours to the point of exhaustion on the project, and multiple team members were forced to take stress leave to alleviate the mental pressure of working on "Anthem."
BioWare is now one of several video game studios accused of implementing crunch time management tactics, which overwork employees to meet internal deadlines.
"One former BioWare developer told me they would frequently find a private room in the office, shut the door, and just cry," Schrier reports.
BioWare responded to the claims about crunch time, and defended employees named in the report.
BioWare issued a follow-up statement addressing the crunch practices and defended members of company leadership that were identified in the Kotaku report. The company said that overwork wasn't a major area of feedback in internal surveys after "Anthem's" release, but avoiding crunch is still a priority.
"We hear the criticisms that were raised by the people in the piece today, and we’re looking at that alongside feedback that we receive in our internal team surveys. We put a lot of focus on better planning to avoid 'crunch time,' and it was not a major topic of feedback in our internal postmortems," BioWare's statement read. "Making games, especially new IP, will always be one of the hardest entertainment challenges. We do everything we can to try and make it healthy and stress-free, but we also know there is always room to improve."
In an internal statement sent to BioWare employees, General Manager Casey Hudson expressed concern about individual members of leadership being singled out for public criticism. He said the company will implement changes to offer a better vision of the company's direction and individual employee roles.
Part of what interested me about returning to BioWare was the challenge of building a new leadership team around solving precisely these problems. We have more to do, but creating a happy and rewarding work environment remains our top priority.
The BioWare news has encouraged more developers to share their own stories about work stress and crunch tactics, bringing more attention to cultural issues within the video game industry. In a survey of nearly 4,000 industry employees attending the Game Developers Conference, 44% said they worked for more than 40 hours a week; 47% of respondents said they felt industry workers should unionize.
I've gotten a number of messages from developers who work or worked at beloved AAA studios saying, "Replace BioWare with [my studio] and it's the same story." Which is heartbreaking. But I can't imagine anything changing unless we keep reporting and talking about these stories.