Activision has just announced Elsewhere Entertainment, an all-new internal studio that's working on a new “narrative-based and genre-defining AAA franchise" 🤔 https://t.co/GCLZCOb0mW
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) May 16, 2024
On May 7th, 2024, Microsoft announced it was shuttering Tango Gameworks, Arkane Austin, Alpha Dog Games, and Roundhouse Games. All of these studios were divisions of Bethesda studios and the layoffs impacted hundreds of employees. Our very own Grubb has reported that other internal game projects at Xbox Game Studios have also been struggling with Grubb stating that the reboot of Perfect Dark being described as being in bad shape. The studio behind that reboot, The Initiative, was first announced being led by industry veterans like Darrell Gallagher, who previously led Crystal Dynamics, Christian Cantamessa, the lead writer for Red Dead Redemption, and Brian Westergaard, the senior producer being 2018's God of War.
This week, things with the Xbox division got even more confusing with the announcement that Activision, a Microsoft-owned subsidiary, would be opening a new studio in Poland with strong AAA aspirations and "exclusively focused on creating a new narrative-based and genre-defining AAA franchise." This new studio is named Elsewhere Entertainment and will be based in Warsaw. To try and drum up excitement, Activision and Microsoft reps have announced the studio will feature "storytelling experts" from The Last of Us, Uncharted, The Witcher, Cyberpunk, Destiny, Tom Clancy’s The Division, and Far Cry. To return to my point about newly formed studio outfits sponsored by Microsoft, The Initiative, proves that star power doesn't necessarily lead to great final products that see the light of day.
As if the Xbox's identity wasn't already murky enough, there are also several reports that the CEO of Microsoft, Satya Nadella is largely reigning in the creative freedom the traditional leaders at the Xbox division and expressing a strong desire to see more Xbox titles on Switch and PS5. Regardless, the idea that any division of Microsoft would be sponsoring a new studio tasked with making a new AAA IP, is simply tone deaf. Then again, maybe you consider this good news because it is a sign that someone with budgetary power at Microsoft doesn't just want the Xbox division to make Call of Duty.
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