Bloomberg has an excerpt from
Play Nice: The Rise, Fall, and Future of
Blizzard Entertainment, a new book by Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier that
will hit digital and physical shelves on October 8th (thanks GS). The title
spoils the reveal here, as the segment digs into the downfall of Blizzard
Entertainment under the ownership of Activision after once being able to do no
wrong in the eyes of gamers. The excerpt discusses the turning point when Activision boss Bobby Kotick's hunger for more product and profit
finally drove Blizzard co-founder Mike Morhaime out of the company. It seems
reductionist to view this as a story of good versus evil, but that's pretty much
how it reads. Here's word on what happened when too much of Blizzard's culture
became assimilated:
People around Morhaime worried that his fights with
Activision were taking a toll. (He’d already submitted a resignation letter in
2017, but Kotick and Blizzard colleagues close to Morhaime had persuaded him to
walk it back.) In the spring of 2018, after the One ABK off-site, Morhaime
realized he’d lost and began to quietly talk with other Blizzard executives
about a succession plan.
On Oct. 3, 2018, Morhaime announced he was stepping down. He didn’t offer much
of an explanation in public, writing in a blog post that he’d “decided it’s time
for someone else to lead Blizzard Entertainment.” But those who worked closely
with him knew why he’d left: He was tired of fighting with Kotick. “He looked
like a second-term president,” said one former executive who asked not to be
identified.