Swinger parties to legal dramas: The dream job turned nightmare of video game company Blizzard
Nerf darts, porn, and vomit.
One might expect these in a frat house after a drunken night of hazing pledges, but it’s a bit more surprising to find them in the offices of company that would one day be bought by Microsoft for $69bn.
In Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier’s new book, Play Nice, he chronicles the 30-year history of Blizzard, which produced some of the most beloved titles in video game history, but was also rocked by #MeToo scandals, and was later the subject of the largest acquisition in gaming industry history.
Blizzard’s first hit was Warcraft, a legendary real-time strategy game that would eventually inspire World of Warcraft, perhaps the most well-known MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role-playing game) in all of gaming. That game, as Schreier notes in his book, was born of the programmers at the company playing a similar game — Dune 2 — and deciding they wanted to make their own version.
The company started as a group of unruly programmers — some who slept overnight in the office on mattresses they’d brought in — tasked with porting video game titles across platforms. Porting is when programmers take an existing game and retool its coding to make it functional on another system. When Rockstar Games takes Red Dead Redemption — built for Xbox and Playstation — and makes it accessible for play on PC, that is porting.
After the success of Warcraft, the company went on to create two other beloved series; Starcraft — a sci-fi game similar to Warcraft that would go on to become essentially a national sport in South Korea — and Diablo, which just released its fourth sequel last year.
Blizzard was churning out hits, and fans of its titles eagerly awaited new installments of their favorite games. The company proved its worth and merged with another gaming behemoth, Activision — the company that makes the continually popular Call of Duty franchise — in 2008.
But while the company was an innovator in the gaming industry, its office culture, according to Play Nice, remained painfully stuck in the past.
In its early days the demographics at the company were overwhelmingly young and male. Play Nice paints scenes of late night Guitar Hero sessions, Nerf battles, and a sea of destroyed office chairs littering the company’s workspaces. A programmer might leave their desk and return to find someone had pulled up pornography on their computer while they were away, according to Schreier.
But no one felt the stagnation of the company’s culture more than the women who worked at the company. At one point, Schreier reports that “near every top executive at Blizzard was involved [romantically] with someone lower than them at the company.”
The alleged boys club mentality at the company saw daylight in 2023 when the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing sued Activision Blizzard alleging that women working at the company faced “constant sexual harassment” and discrimination, The Verge reported at the time. That case came after Activision Blizzard settled another lawsuit with the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2023 that alleged employees were subject to a toxic work environment at the company.
The settlement in the EEOC case established a consent decree at the company and required Activision Blizzard to create an $18m settlement fund to compensate its employees.
The allegations were good for employees who were seeking better working conditions, but became a nightmare for Microsoft, which had begun its acquisition of the company for an unprecedented $68.7bn in 2022 and was battling the Federal Trade Commission over anti-competition concerns when the allegations arose.
Schreier delves into the complaints and reporting inaccuracies, around the company at the time, debunking some of the stories. In one infamous incident, a pair of employees posed with a picture of the now disgraced Bill Cosby in a hotel suite, which became a scandal that cost them their jobs despite the fact that the photo was actually taken before the allegations against Cosby were widely known — but also confirming that women often felt like second-class citizens in the company.