The Japan Times - Activision Blizzard: Troubled powerhouse in gaming world

EUR -
AED 4.313662
AFN 76.92863
ALL 96.595806
AMD 448.35549
ANG 2.10226
AOA 1076.935627
ARS 1692.033606
AUD 1.76444
AWG 2.11394
AZN 2.001162
BAM 1.95918
BBD 2.365972
BDT 143.557695
BGN 1.955795
BHD 0.442683
BIF 3482.129613
BMD 1.174411
BND 1.517111
BOB 8.116971
BRL 6.369895
BSD 1.174722
BTN 106.233844
BWP 15.564789
BYN 3.46306
BYR 23018.462198
BZD 2.362566
CAD 1.616747
CDF 2630.681819
CHF 0.934614
CLF 0.02725
CLP 1069.008384
CNY 8.28489
CNH 8.28401
COP 4466.873519
CRC 587.611367
CUC 1.174411
CUP 31.1219
CVE 110.717676
CZK 24.280489
DJF 208.716845
DKK 7.469503
DOP 74.986625
DZD 152.445685
EGP 55.826235
ERN 17.61617
ETB 182.298047
FJD 2.660336
FKP 0.874732
GBP 0.878413
GEL 3.175445
GGP 0.874732
GHS 13.488161
GIP 0.874732
GMD 85.732445
GNF 10206.809344
GTQ 8.997524
GYD 245.762995
HKD 9.141483
HNL 30.774085
HRK 7.533971
HTG 153.975014
HUF 385.289582
IDR 19539.562216
ILS 3.784887
IMP 0.874732
INR 106.392448
IQD 1538.478851
IRR 49469.146008
ISK 148.39907
JEP 0.874732
JMD 188.084522
JOD 0.832704
JPY 183.010285
KES 151.386086
KGS 102.702723
KHR 4704.692226
KMF 492.670011
KPW 1056.965776
KRW 1733.396351
KWD 0.360204
KYD 0.978985
KZT 612.654469
LAK 25461.238188
LBP 105168.535604
LKR 362.984751
LRD 207.900213
LSL 19.824511
LTL 3.467732
LVL 0.71039
LYD 6.365756
MAD 10.794309
MDL 19.858179
MGA 5296.595535
MKD 61.544022
MMK 2466.578767
MNT 4166.079309
MOP 9.419713
MRU 46.671551
MUR 53.909874
MVR 18.090325
MWK 2039.369674
MXN 21.160027
MYR 4.81192
MZN 75.057072
NAD 19.824506
NGN 1706.079535
NIO 43.189022
NOK 11.891784
NPR 169.974551
NZD 2.023053
OMR 0.451556
PAB 1.174722
PEN 4.232236
PGK 5.002057
PHP 69.389511
PKR 329.099462
PLN 4.223647
PYG 7890.614515
QAR 4.276154
RON 5.091665
RSD 117.38833
RUB 94.010407
RWF 1704.070849
SAR 4.40673
SBD 9.60287
SCR 16.766734
SDG 706.412736
SEK 10.881544
SGD 1.516535
SHP 0.881113
SLE 28.332718
SLL 24626.816338
SOS 671.18038
SRD 45.271253
STD 24307.943541
STN 24.956241
SVC 10.278691
SYP 12987.087677
SZL 19.824497
THB 37.088502
TJS 10.795581
TMT 4.122184
TND 3.424628
TOP 2.827701
TRY 50.142084
TTD 7.971721
TWD 36.793724
TZS 2900.796395
UAH 49.634729
UGX 4175.203923
USD 1.174411
UYU 46.099344
UZS 14095.876316
VES 314.084275
VND 30894.064621
VUV 142.674728
WST 3.269498
XAF 657.087946
XAG 0.01896
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.173906
XCG 2.117144
XDR 0.816434
XOF 655.321915
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.101318
ZAR 19.820623
ZMK 10571.115533
ZMW 27.106655
ZWL 378.159971
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

Activision Blizzard: Troubled powerhouse in gaming world
Activision Blizzard: Troubled powerhouse in gaming world

Activision Blizzard: Troubled powerhouse in gaming world

Activision Blizzard is a star developer of gaming hits like "Call of Duty", but the firm has been roiled by serious sex discrimination allegations that have led to lawsuits, firings and official scrutiny.

Text size:

Microsoft's buyout deal values the company at a whopping $69 billion, despite the scandal that has put an unflattering spotlight on the "Candy Crush" maker's leadership and company culture.

Founded in 1979 by former Atari programmers unhappy with their pay, Activision had more than $8 billion in sales in 2020.

It relies on a few major franchises, namely "World of Warcraft", a multiplayer game that is still very popular almost 30 years after it launch, the first-person shooter "Call of Duty" and the "Candy Crush" puzzle game.

Yet since last year, the company has been hit by a major equality scandal.

Trouble began to surface with the launch, in late July, of a lawsuit by the state of California, which reported sexual harassment and discrimination against women, who represent about 20 percent of the firm's employees.

A nearly all white and male suite of executives, pay disparities and other markers of gender disparity have turned up in regulators allegations.

- Bad behavior -

The documents also report claims of a "frat boy" party culture of heavy drinking in which women workers were groped, had to fend off sexual advances and faced retaliation if they spoke up.

"Male employees proudly come into work hungover, play video games for long periods of time during work while delegating their responsibilities to female employees, engage in banter about their sexual encounters, talk openly about female bodies, and joke about rape," the California state suit says.

Activision Blizzard has reached an agreement with a US federal discrimination watchdog to create an $18 million fund to settle claims alleging sexual harassment and gender discrimination.

CEO Bobby Kotick apologized to employees and announced last year the implementation of a "zero tolerance" policy against harassment, as well as the creation of a $250 million envelope to allow the publisher to increase to 50 percent the proportion of women and non-binary people.

It has been a turbulent period for Kotick, who has been CEO for over three decades after entering the company with a group of investors and a personal $400,000 stake that would be worth $16 billion at Tuesday's price.

An old-fashioned entrepreneur, Kotick rebuilt Activision after its near bankruptcy in the 1990s before embarking on a run of acquisitions to negotiate the shift to multiplayer games and then to the smartphone revolution.

In 2008, he merged his firm with Vivendi Games, allowing Vivendi to take 52 percent of the group's capital in order to get "World of Warcraft".

Only five years later, he and a group of investors bought the bulk of the participation of Vivendi, then in financial difficulties.

Then in 2016, Activision Blizzard dropped $5.9 billion to acquire the British-Swedish King, creator of "Candy Crush", and positioned itself in the world of mobile games.

Kotick has been pressured to resign by many critics, investors and employees, as a Wall Street Journal investigation alleged in November that he had known about certain accusations for several years.

According to the Journal, the Long Island, New York, native told employees that he was ready to leave the company if anti-harassment measures did not bear fruit quickly enough.

Y.Kato--JT