Current:Home > Contact-usIn major video game company first, Activision Blizzard employees are joining a union-LoTradeCoin
In major video game company first, Activision Blizzard employees are joining a union
View Date:2024-12-24 00:33:07
Workers in one division of Activision Blizzard, the major video game company behind popular franchises such as Call of Duty, Overwatch, and Candy Crush, have voted to join the Communication Workers of America.
The employees unionizing are 28 quality assurance testers at Raven Software, a subsidiary of Activision Blizzard. The final vote count was 19 votes in favor, 3 against. While the vote directly impacts only a small number of workers, the push for unionization is being watched by many in the games and tech industry.
"It's a beautiful day to organize," said former Activision employee and organizer Jessica Gonzalez, who livestreamed a watch party of the vote count on Twitter Spaces. "We are going to celebrate and get ready to make a contract."
"We respect and believe in the right of all employees to decide whether or not to support or vote for a union," said Activision Blizzard spokesperson Kelvin Liu in an emailed statement. "We believe that an important decision that will impact the entire Raven Software studio of roughly 350 people should not be made by 19 Raven employees."
Microsoft announced in January it is planning to buy Activision Blizzard in an almost $70 billion deal, pending a go-ahead from federal regulators. Microsoft, which makes Xbox, is hoping to use Activision Blizzard's properties to break into mobile gaming and to better position itself in the future.
Also in January, Raven QA workers announced they were forming the Game Workers Alliance union in conjunction with the Communications Workers of America (many of NPR's broadcast technicians are also a part of CWA).
By that time, workers had organized multiple strikes and temporary work stoppages protesting layoffs. Workers say they have been frustrated for years, citing a lack of communication from management, low pay, and long hours, especially right before a product launch.
Labor organizers also point to the way they say Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick mishandled numerous sexual misconduct allegations within the workplace. The company has faced a number of state and federal lawsuits alleging people at the company sexually harassed and discriminated against its female employees.
"Our goal is to make Activision Blizzard a model for the industry, and we will continue to focus on eliminating harassment and discrimination from our workplace," said Kotick in a statement in March, after a court approved an $18 million settlement between the company and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
The company has also addressed workplace conditions more broadly.
Activision Blizzard had initially tried to stop the vote from happening in the first place, splitting up the QA workforce among different departments within Raven Software, and arguing to the National Labor Relations Board that the QA workers didn't qualify as a bargaining unit. (At the time, Brian Raffel, studio head of Raven Software, said that the restructuring of the QA workers had been in the works since 2021 and was part of a broader plan to "integrate studio QA more into the development process").
The NLRB sided with the QA workers, and allowed the vote to proceed.
Just moments ahead of the vote, the NLRB announced that one of its regional offices found merit to allegations that the company violated the National Labor Relations Act by threatening employees who were attempting to unionize by enforcing its social media policy.
"These allegations are false," read a statement from Activision Blizzard spokesperson Liu. "Employees may and do talk freely about these workplace issues without retaliation, and our social media policy expressly incorporates employees' NLRA rights."
Workers at video game companies seem to be more and more willing to organize within their workplace. In 2019, workers at Riot Games performed a walkout, protesting what they said was forced arbitration and sexism. Earlier this year, workers at the small indie studio Vodeo became the first North American video game company to form a union.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- California researchers discover mysterious, gelatinous new sea slug
- Gypsy Rose Blanchard is pregnant: 'I want to be everything my mother wasn't'
- Massachusetts ballot question would give Uber and Lyft drivers right to form a union
- What is THC? Answering the questions you were too embarrassed to ask.
- When do new 'Yellowstone' episodes come out? Here's the Season 5, Part 2 episode schedule
- A city’s fine for a profane yard sign about Biden and Trump was unconstitutional, judge rules
- Fort Campbell soldier found dead in home was stabbed nearly 70 times, autopsy shows
- Microsoft relinquishes OpenAI board seat as regulators zero in on artificial intelligence
- As the transition unfolds, Trump eyes one of his favorite targets: US intelligence
- Pritzker signs law banning health insurance companies’ ‘predatory tactics,’ including step therapy
Ranking
- Horoscopes Today, November 11, 2024
- UEFA Euro 2024 bracket: England vs. Spain in Sunday's final
- Watch this wife tap out her Air Force husband with a heartfelt embrace
- The retirement savings crisis: Why more Americans can’t afford to stop working
- Democrat Ruben Gallego wins Arizona US Senate race against Republican Kari Lake
- Armed man fatally shot in gunfire exchange at Yellowstone National Park identified
- Colorado got $2.5 million signing bonus to join Big 12; other new members didn't. Why?
- Mississippi man charged with stealing car that had a baby inside; baby found safe
Recommendation
-
Gisele Bündchen Makes First Major Appearance Since Pregnancy
-
Long-unpaid bills lead to some water service cutoffs in Mississippi’s capital city
-
College can boost your income by 37%. Here are the top schools for the best financial outcomes.
-
What the White House and the president's doctor's reports say about Biden's health
-
Trump on Day 1: Begin deportation push, pardon Jan. 6 rioters and make his criminal cases vanish
-
Texas Leaders Worry That Bitcoin Mines Threaten to Crash the State Power Grid
-
In swing-state Pennsylvania, a Latino-majority city embraces a chance to sway the 2024 election
-
The cost of staying cool: How extreme heat is costing Americans more than ever