Last week Microsoft laid off almost 2000 people from its gaming division, a staggering 8% of that section's total workforce. People with families, dependents, mortgages. People who had
Yesterday, Microsoft laid off nearly 2,000 people in its gaming division, or about eight percent of the division in total. Initially, this was followed by confusion from workers: Where
It’s been a mere three months since we, the staff of Aftermath, invented blogging and revolutionized the internet, but today we’re trying something a little different. We call
Microsoft is laying off 1900 people, or about 8% of its gaming division workforce, The Verge reported Thursday. The layoffs will largely affect people at Activision Blizzard, the company Microsoft
Today, Activision CEO Bobby Kotick is leaving his post following a three-decades-long tenure, which has seen everything from the birth of juggernauts like Call of Duty to high-profile allegations of
Today Blizzard announced that it’s "transitioning from the Overwatch League and evolving competitive Overwatch in a new direction.” In other words, OWL is dead. What more is there
When Microsoft and Activision Blizzard officially tied the knot last month – in whatever sense a prehistoric megalodon devouring a normal-sized shark constitutes “tying the knot” – you might not have expected