Ubisoft Staff Push Back Against Company Restructure With Three-Day Strike


Ubisoft Logo
Image: Zion Grassl / Nintendo Life

Late last month, Ubisoft announced a major organisational restructure which saw, among many other things, several studio closures and six game cancellations. This week, in response to the changes, at least 1,200 Ubisoft workers have taken to the streets in a three-day international strike.

The strike began on 10th February and runs until today. Ubisoft Paris’ Solidaires Informatique union representative, Marc Rutschlé, told Gamesindustry.biz that the strike mainly took place in Paris, though there has also been “additional activity” at Ubisoft Milan.

“At this stage, it seems clear to us that [Ubisoft CEO] Yves Guillemot has no knowledge or understanding of his company or its employees,” Rutschlé told Gamesindustry, “The company is continuing its cost reduction and layoff plan.”

Rutschlé said that the Ubisoft staff are “already working under pressure, often understaffed,” with no meaningful pay rises in “several years”. On top of this, Ubisoft has issued a return-to-office mandate to “boost the collective performance of AAA,” which requires all staff to work five days a week from the Ubisoft offices — a policy that previously saw employees walk out on strike back in 2024.

The Solidaires Informatique union organised a smaller strike on 22nd January, the day after Ubisoft published its restructuring plan.

Today (12th Feb) marks the end of this strike, but it remains to be seen whether any further action will come in the future. Ubisoft itself will be sharing additional information on the restructure today, so we’ll keep an eye out for any developments.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Guild Wars 3 mission statement: no pay-to-win, no subscription fees – “The lines between an MMO and a live-service game have blurred”

    Guild Wars 3 developer ArenaNet has released a mission statement after the game’s sudden and celebrated debut during Summer Game Fest earlier this month. The main points? No pay-to-win, no…

    Kagurabachi manga goes on short hiatus following anime announcement

    Kagurabachi is one of the biggest titles among the new generation of Shonen Jump manga, its popularity further confirmed by the recent announcement of an anime adaptation coming in 2027.…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    West Antarctica Is Missing Way Too Much Ice

    West Antarctica Is Missing Way Too Much Ice

    How Boeing’s T-7A Was Built In 3 Years & Became The Blueprint To End The F-35 Era

    How Boeing’s T-7A Was Built In 3 Years & Became The Blueprint To End The F-35 Era

    Steady UK inflation removes any pressure for immediate rate rise

    ‘We’re just moving forward’: rebuilding efforts carry on almost a year after Kingston fire

    ‘We’re just moving forward’: rebuilding efforts carry on almost a year after Kingston fire

    ¡Austria sella la victoria con gol de Arnautovic en el cierre!

    ¡Austria sella la victoria con gol de Arnautovic en el cierre!

    Sixty percent of US consumers say ‘AI’ in brand messaging is a turnoff, survey finds

    Sixty percent of US consumers say ‘AI’ in brand messaging is a turnoff, survey finds