You might think the failure of Embracer would maybe make regulators start acting on the mass conglomerization of media companies instead of hand waving everything through assuming the free market will provide.
Most of the companies’ Embracer is closing aren’t even unprofitable. They were/are doing fine even if their games weren’t big hits. Embracer just can’t pay its bills.
Unfortunately, I doubt it’ll have much of an impact. Most of the properties/studios Embracer owns aren’t popular enough to get people to make noise about it. And people don’t tend to see the bigger picture - especially when these stories about studio closures are trickling out rather than all happening at once. I’m sure there’ll be a lot of talk about it if something happens to do with Gearbox/Borderlands or The Lord Of The Rings, or if multiple studios all get shuttered at once, but other than that, I expect it’ll just be small stories that continue to fly under the radar.
And regulators don’t seem to care about video games unless people make noise. They get involved in things like loot box regulations or Microsoft acquiring Activision because those are big deals that almost everyone in the gaming sphere has an opinion on. But unfortunately, I don’t see Piranha Bytes having issues or being closed getting enough attention for anything to change.
You might think the failure of Embracer would maybe make regulators start acting on the mass conglomerization of media companies instead of hand waving everything through assuming the free market will provide.
Most of the companies’ Embracer is closing aren’t even unprofitable. They were/are doing fine even if their games weren’t big hits. Embracer just can’t pay its bills.
Unfortunately, I doubt it’ll have much of an impact. Most of the properties/studios Embracer owns aren’t popular enough to get people to make noise about it. And people don’t tend to see the bigger picture - especially when these stories about studio closures are trickling out rather than all happening at once. I’m sure there’ll be a lot of talk about it if something happens to do with Gearbox/Borderlands or The Lord Of The Rings, or if multiple studios all get shuttered at once, but other than that, I expect it’ll just be small stories that continue to fly under the radar.
And regulators don’t seem to care about video games unless people make noise. They get involved in things like loot box regulations or Microsoft acquiring Activision because those are big deals that almost everyone in the gaming sphere has an opinion on. But unfortunately, I don’t see Piranha Bytes having issues or being closed getting enough attention for anything to change.