Final Fantasy 16 actor criticizes job security in the games industry amid thousands of lay offs: "Honestly, are we going to get serious?"

Authored by gamesradar.com and submitted by YouthIsBlind
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Ben Starr, the voice behind Final Fantasy 16’s main man Clive, called out the video game industry’s recent instability in a viral clip.

Ahead of his Golden Joystick win for Best Lead Performer, Ben Starr was asked about whether or not 2023 was the best year for games. Considering how many five-star games spawned from this year, in both the blockbuster and indie space, it’s no surprise to see Starr agree that this was an “astonishing year for the video games that have been made, but not necessarily for the industry that it reflects.”

“Honestly, are we going to get serious?” the actor asks in the interview clip below. “It’s not a great year for video games in so far as all of the layoffs - it’s not great for that, and that needs to be spoken about at an event like this. Maybe there is something missing because a lot of people who made those games are no longer working at those companies and I think that also has to be respected.”

Is 2023 the best - or worst - year for games?"Honestly, are we going to get serious?"Final Fantasy XVI actor and passionate gamer @The_Ben_Starr gets real about the complex state of the gaming industry pic.twitter.com/nqOOczyCLKNovember 30, 2023 See more

Starr continues: “Hopefully this is the worst that it gets - I fear that it isn't - but I hope the industry figures out a way of course correcting and allowing those people who made these games we’re celebrating today to celebrate them as well and not be on the unemployment line.”

Layoffs and job insecurity have always been issues in the industry, but in 2023, the problem seems to have ballooned as almost every major tech company made cuts. Embracer Group - the megacorp that’s been on a spending spree for years - shut down the Saints Row studio, laid off staff at the Tomb Raider studio, and is eyeing up more studio closures before the holidays.

Microsoft laid off 10,000 staff across all departments. CD Projekt Red went through three rounds of layoffs. Epic Games let go of 830 employees despite Fortnite’s record-breaking performance. BioWare and Bungie laid off staff that had been with the respective companies for over two decades, reportedly delaying Destiny 2’s next expansion and the Marathon reboot. And those examples only scratch the surface of how dire 2023 has been for developers, despite the industry’s growth.

GTA 6’s publisher blames the layoffs on “the enthusiasm of the pandemic,” and believes that some companies overextended themselves during lockdown.

Vivid-Pollution-5990 on December 1st, 2023 at 15:21 UTC »

Guess I got my game design degree for nothing. :(

deathbysnoosnoo422 on December 1st, 2023 at 14:20 UTC »

"Generative AI tools have disrupted China's video game art industry, leading to a 70% decline in illustrator jobs and a 40x increase in productivity. This upheaval demonstrates the power of AI to rapidly transformation the creative industry, as artists face job insecurity and reduced pay amid increasing reliance on AI."

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its only get better or worse from here as next year we may have ai that is 100x better and in about 3-5 years we will have AGI at that point most if not all jobs will not need humans

wsippel on December 1st, 2023 at 12:25 UTC »

A number of great game releases don‘t make up for investments drying up and rising interest rates. Game development requires a significant investment up front, with the hope that you‘ll get a positive RoI a couple years down the line. It‘s a bet. And those who can afford gambling millions are currently looking for safer bets. That‘s how Embracer stumbled: They were expecting a 2 billion dollar investment from Saudi Arabia, the deal fell through, now they have all those studios and IPs, but no money to actually do anything.