If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.
The boss of the company behind Assassin's Creed wants the game industry to stop taking layoffs personally: "There’s a maturity that we need to find within our workforce"
For context, this comes from the same director that oversaw the closure of one UK studio for Ubisoft and layoffs at another just this year alone

Popverse's top stories of the day
- Five Nights at Freddy's creator Scott Cawthon knew that fans needed to hear the right music in the movie to know they were being heard - and the Living Tombstone are grateful he did
- Sliding into your DMs: Dimension 20 creator Brennan Lee Mulligan gets chatty ahead of Fantasy High and its Hollywood Bowl debut
- DC's flagship Batman series delayed a month as Jim Lee and Jeph Loeb's 'H2SH' storyline hits a snag
If there is one consistent story in gaming over the past few years, it has been the near-constant layoffs that have hit the industry. There has barely been a month that has passed without a studio shutting down or laying people off. In January 2025, Assassin's Creed and Prince of Persia maker Ubisoft closed one of its UK-based development studios, something that the managing director of the publisher’s remaining UK studio has highlighted the need for “maturity” in the game development workforce.
Lisa Opie, managing director of Ubisoft Reflections studio in Newcastle, UK, explained that the instability in the gaming industry had instilled a greater understanding of the business side of game development in their staff. “There’s a maturity that we need to find within our workforce and within our approach,” she explained in an interview with The Game Business. “And within our sector and business that enables us to adjust to those market shifts.”
Opie reflected on how her time working in television production differed from her time leading a gaming studio. Particularly, staff at film and TV studios are more connected to the business outcomes of their work – and feel any slowdown in their industry more quickly. “In the game sector, where there’s a much less flexible workforce, plus video games take quite a long time to make, you can have a cushioning,” she said. “I think what you can see at the moment is people waking up to the fact that there are commercial challenges in our sector that are driving what is happening.”

Personally, we think that game developers have had a pretty good idea of the uncertainties in the gaming industry and it might be slightly insulting to imply otherwise. After all, it tends to be the staff that lose their jobs rather than executives and directors like Lisa Opie. “These aren’t personal decisions we’re making,” Opie said of the layoffs that she’s overseen this year, which resulted in an entire studio being closed and those at another studio losing their jobs. “We’re making decisions because the whole sector is shifting around us and we need to change. It’s difficult. It’s challenging. But that is the reality. At the end of the day, we have to be driven by the players who buy our games.”
We’re sure that it felt somewhat personal to those who lost their jobs, but we understand that, even before Trump threw the gaming industry into chaos with arbitrary and costly tariffs, things were tough for game developers who went through massive expansion during the 2020 pandemic and are now feeling the crunch from that decision.
We also understand that implying that employees don’t understand the business side of their industry when they have always been the most vulnerable to changes in the market is probably not a great look for a director at Ubisoft, a huge game developer and publisher that has let go nearly 200 people this year alone.
You don't need to beat the game to prepare for the next one—here are all the major new and upcoming games coming our way.
Follow Popverse for upcoming event coverage and news
Find out how we conduct our review by reading our review policy
Let Popverse be your tour guide through the wilderness of pop culture
Sign in and let us help you find your new favorite thing.

Comments
Want to join the discussion? Please activate your account first.
Visit Reedpop ID if you need to resend the confirmation email.