Activision Blizzard changes course, will recognize and negotiate with Raven QA union

Activision
(Image credit: Bloomberg (Getty Images))

After months of resistance, Activision Blizzard has announced that it will recognize the Game Workers Alliance and begin "good faith negotiations" with its parent union, theCommunications Workers of America, to reach a collective bargaining agreement with the 27 quality assurance workers at Raven Software.The QA employees announced their intent to unionize under the CWA as the Game Workers Alliance in January, following a strike that began in December 2021 to protest planned layoffs.

"We begin this process after major investments in our QA team members over the past couple years, including significantly increasing starting pay for QA specialists and converting over 1,100 U.S.-based temporary and contingent QA workers to full-time positions," Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick said in a message to employees.

"This conversion is providing access to comprehensive company benefits for QA employees and their eligible dependents. In addition, we have expanded access to performance bonuses for QA employees and learning and development opportunities. We also have integrated QA more seamlessly into the game development process, increasing collaboration that results in better products for our players and more opportunities for our teams."

It's a major positive step for the Raven union, but the ABK Workers Alliance said in response to the statement that the "major investments" touted by Kotick "were done as concessions from mounting employee pressure to try to stop unionization from occurring." 

Until today's announcement, Blizzard has in fact resisted unionization efforts: The company declined to voluntarily recognize the union and contested the subsequent National Labor Relations Board filing, saying that any union should encompass all employees at Raven and not just the QA department. When the NLRB ruled that the union vote could go ahead anyway, Activision Blizzard said that "a direct relationship with team members is the best path to achieving individual and company goals, and that it was reviewing its legal options for a possible appeal.

In May, Raven QA employees voted overwhelmingly to unionize, and a few days later Microsoft's Xbox chief Phil Spencer said the company will not oppose unionization efforts if and when its acquisition of Activision Blizzard is completed. That may have been the signal to Kotick and co. that it was time to quit dicking around: Microsoft said in a 2021 SEC filing that both companies would continue to operate independently until the completion of the buyout, but with Microsoft so clearly stating that it will not fight the union, continued resistance from current Activision Blizzard leadership would be both futile and potentially irritating to the new boss.

It's also fair to note that, absent any realistic avenues of appeal, there wasn't anything else Activision Blizzard could do: With the union voted for and established under the authority of the NLRB, the company is legally obligated to recognize and negotiate with it.

Ironically, the pay increase Kotick mentioned as part of Activision Blizzard's "major investment" into QA employees does not apply to the unionized workers at Raven "due to legal obligations under the National Labor Relations Act," the company said in April. Now that the union is established, any pay bumps or other benefit changes will have to be negotiated, and that could be a while yet: Kotick said in his statement that "first labor contracts can take some time to complete."

"We welcome the news that Activision is ready to begin contract negotiations with the Raven Quality Assurance employees," CWA Secretary-Treasurer Sara Steffens said in a statement emailed to PC Gamer. "This is a positive step toward high road labor relations at Activision. The Raven workers have remained united in their fight for union representation and a collective bargaining agreement. 

"We know that the management approach recommended by anti-union consultants is ineffective and detrimental, and hope that today's announcement is the first of many steps towards full collaboration between ABK leadership and employees to positively shape the future of Activision through a strong union contract.”

Andy Chalk
US News Lead

Andy has been gaming on PCs from the very beginning, starting as a youngster with text adventures and primitive action games on a cassette-based TRS80. From there he graduated to the glory days of Sierra Online adventures and Microprose sims, ran a local BBS, learned how to build PCs, and developed a longstanding love of RPGs, immersive sims, and shooters. He began writing videogame news in 2007 for The Escapist and somehow managed to avoid getting fired until 2014, when he joined the storied ranks of PC Gamer. He covers all aspects of the industry, from new game announcements and patch notes to legal disputes, Twitch beefs, esports, and Henry Cavill. Lots of Henry Cavill.

Read more
Blitzcrank from League of Legends
League of Legends hit by SAG-AFTRA union action as Riot delays English VO to 'respect the ongoing strike' over AI, though voice actors think it could be doing more to help
Bobby Kotick in 2008, after the Vivendi merger that made Activision into Activision Blizzard.
Bobby Kotick says he'd never have raised World of Warcraft's subscription by even a dollar because 'it's a prickly audience, you don't wanna do too much to agitate them'
Orc man looking pensively at camera
Former EA exec says the ailing mega-publisher missed a chance to snag Blizzard and other heavy hitters before Activision: 'EA saw all those first and passed on all of them'
CEO of Activision Blizzard, Bobby Kotick, speaks onstage during "Managing Excellence: Getting Consistently Great Results" at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on October 19, 2016 in San Francisco, California.
Bobby Kotick reckons the Warcraft film was 'a terrible idea' for Blizzard, and in the end 'was one of the worst movies I've ever seen'
Ghost, from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (2022), looks bleakly at a fellow passenger in a transport.
For COD’s sake: One player’s 763-day legal quest to make Activision unban their account ends in total success: ‘Worth the effort’
The four members of the Suicide Squad looking confused.
In what will surely come as no surprise at all, the end of Suicide Squad means layoffs at Warner Bros.
Latest in Gaming Industry
A computer screen with program code warning of a detected malware script program. 3d illustration
Coder faces 10 years' jailtime for creating a 'kill switch' that screwed-up his employers' systems when he was laid off
Atomfall screenshot
Rebellion CEO puts the studio's recent avoidance of layoffs down to control of scope and cost: 'Sometimes we say, guys, this game's too big'
Judge Dredd promotional image in Warzone
Half-a-dozen 2000AD games were in the works before fizzling out: 'The games you get to see are a tiny representative of the number that get started—sadly'
sniper elite 5 cover
Sniper Elite CEO reckons Swen Vincke is right to snarl at short-sighted publishers: 'You could argue that their business at senior level isn't making games… their business is managing their shareholders' perceptions'
Kasumi and Joker in Persona 5 Royal.
After 31 years in games, Persona director Katsura Hashino just got a 'Newcomer Award' and $5,000 from the Japanese government
A picture of Bowser behind jail bars.
Nintendo wins major French piracy case with EU-wide consequences: 'Significant not only for Nintendo, but for the entire games industry'
Latest in News
No Rest for the Wicked Steam early access screenshots
No Rest for the Wicked developer Moon Studios is now 'fully independent' after acquiring the rights to the game from Take-Two
A hunter posing with an absurd Blangonga outfit in Monster Hunter Wilds.
Attention, fashion hunters: There's a Monster Hunter Wilds mod to disable all those obnoxious glowing buff effects that distract from your fits
Fallout New Vegas Key Art
The Fallout season 2 leaks continue with videos of the New Vegas set, including a sign for Mr. House's casino
Gallywix wears an uneasy smile as he's confronted by Xal'atath in WoW: The War Within.
World of Warcraft guild uses exploits to get world 'first' on the game's new raid, gets banned, puts its name backwards and does it again
Photo of BlizzCon 2023 main stage
BlizzCon 2025 isn't happening, meaning the event will miss its 20th anniversary, but it will return in 2026 to 'meaningfully elevate this iconic celebration'
Shohei Ohtani wearing Samurai Shohei outfit in Fortnite
The best baseball player alive is coming to Fortnite, and so is his dog