Activision Blizzard lays off roughly 50 esports employees as online events grow in priority

Overwatch League logo
(Image credit: Activision)

A Sports Business Journal report says Activision Blizzard Esports will lay off roughly 50 employees as it prepares to reduce its focus on live events in both the Overwatch League and Call of Duty League.

The leagues were envisioned as operating similarly to conventional sports leagues when they launched, with a heavy focus on city-based teams competing in front of live audiences. But the Covid-19 outbreak forced a move to online events and it sounds like the company might maintain that approach even after the pandemic is over.

"We learned a lot last year in terms of how the leagues can be structured for online play, and we’ll look to carry forward the best practices from that," Activision Blizzard Sports and Entertainment president Tony Petitti told Sports Business Journal. "In terms of timing, it’s a reaction to the realities of how the leagues are playing and what resources we need to allocate to best serve the league, owners, teams and fans."

Activision Blizzard isn't looking to drop live events completely, Petitti said, noting that discussions about structural changes to the league predated his arrival at the company in August 2020. Activision Blizzard said something very similar in a separate statement confirming the layoffs.

"Players are increasingly choosing to connect with our games digitally. Everything we do is through the lens of our players, and over the past year, we have been exploring how we might best serve their needs," an Activision Blizzard rep said. “The esports team, much like traditional sports, entertainment, and broadcasting industries, has had to adapt its business due to the impact the pandemic has had on live events. We retained a vast majority of the team throughout a complex year and these changes were not made lightly, particularly in the current environment. We are taking extensive steps to ease the transition for all affected employees.

"Live events are still very much a part of both the Overwatch League and Call of Duty League strategies. We plan to get back to them as soon as it's safe to do so and logistically feasible."

US employees who were laid off will get a minimum of 90 days severance pay, health benefits for a year, and $200 Battle.net gift cards, the rep said.

Aside from its impact on live events, Covid-19 has caused problems for individual Overwatch League teams as well. In May 2020 the Vancouver Titans released its entire roster, saying the pandemic created too many challenges for a Vancouver-based team with a roster from South Korea, and in January 2021 the LA Valiant made a similar move, dropping its players in preparation for competition in China as part of the East region.

Bloomberg reports that there were layoffs in other Activision Blizzard departments today, too, including at subsidiary King.com. According to that site, a source familiar with today's events puts the total number of jobs lost at somewhere below 190.  

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
Callisto Protocol
The Callisto Protocol studio lays off more employees, but 'remains operational'
a very large Mr Fantastic with an inflated chest, and slightly long beard
NetEase confirms Marvel Rivals layoffs, says cuts were made 'to optimize development efficiency for the game'
marvel rivals characters screenshots
Two days after laying off US-based developers, NetEase says Marvel Rivals has surpassed 40 million players
rumbleverse
Iron Galaxy lays off 66 employees in a 'last resort' effort to 'enable our long term survival'
Dauntless - Heroes pose in fur trimmed armor
Dauntless developer Phoenix Labs lays off 'the majority of the studio' after a year of turmoil
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 FPS
A soldier looks out over the Verdansk map, as a single tear rolls down his cheek.
The original Verdansk map is returning to Call of Duty: Warzone, to celebrate which we get a soldier crying to Nat King Cole
FragPunk codes - A close-up shot of a mercenary wearing a mask with glowing eyes.
All FragPunk codes and how to redeem them
An evil-looking demon with red eyes and horns
You can theoretically beat Doom: The Dark Ages without using a gun, but 'You'd have a hard time, that's for sure,' says the game's director
Official Doom Guy art superimposed over Vault 666 Fallout-themed background.
Fallout-themed Doom mod Vault 666 has multiple endings, an OP Dogmeat companion, and a Ron Perlman-impersonating narrator so good, I was worried it was AI-generated at first
The Doomslayer in armor
Doom: The Dark Ages won't end with the Slayer in a coffin waiting for the start of Doom 2016: 'That would mean that we couldn't tell any more medieval stories'
Doom: The Dark Ages art
'I think only the shotguns are the same,' says Doom: The Dark Ages director, otherwise the guns are brand-new or significantly transformed
Latest in News
Pedro Pascal as Joel in a coat in winter looking unhappy
'Don't you know what he did?': The truth comes out in The Last of Us Season 2 trailer
Aloy
'Creepy,' 'ghastly,' 'rancid': Viewers react to leaked video of Sony's AI-powered Aloy
Split Fiction trailer still - Zoe and Mio standing side by side, wearing glowing neon sci-fi jammies
Split Fiction sells 1 million copies over 2 days
A soldier looks out over the Verdansk map, as a single tear rolls down his cheek.
The original Verdansk map is returning to Call of Duty: Warzone, to celebrate which we get a soldier crying to Nat King Cole
More than 5 years after launch, Control gets a surprise patch that lets everyone play the Hideo Kojima mission
Swen Vincke
Swen Vincke stamps seal of approval on Stardew Valley mod that yoinks the Baldur's Gate 3 cast out of D&D and into a cosy pastoral life