Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Microsoft plans to recognize Call of Duty devs’ new union

Add as a preferred source on Google

Xbox CEO Phil Spencer said that Microsoft will recognize Raven Software’s union once its nearly $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard closes next year.

According to a report from Kotaku, Spencer held an internal Microsoft meeting on Thursday where he addressed some of the statements he made about game workers’ unions at last year’s meeting when he mentioned that he lacked experience with them. Today, he said that he took the time to learn more about the organization efforts of game developers across the industry and gave a welcoming statement of support for them.

Recommended Videos

“Linda Norman and I have been spending a lot of time educating myself about unions,” Spencer reportedly said. “We absolutely support employees’ right to organize and form unions.”

Spencer’s statement corroborates the one Lisa Tanzi, Microsoft’s corporate vice president and general counsel, gave The Washington Post in March saying the company will respect the outcome of a union formed by Activision Blizzard devs.

Although Microsoft doesn’t have a relationship with Communication Workers of America nor with the Game Workers Alliance, Spencer made it very clear that he supports the right of game developers to organize unions, especially Raven Software’s union, knowing that Activision Blizzard won’t recognize it before the acquisition goes through pending investigation by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). It’s technically illegal for a company not to recognize a union at this point.

“Once the deal closes, we would absolutely support [an] employees’ organization that’s in place. We think it is a right of employees and something that can be part of a relationship between a company and people who work at the company,” he said. “But when the deal closes, we will absolutely recognize [the union].”

Spencer’s statement comes three days after Raven Software formed its union after a 19-3 vote, marking it the first AAA games studio union in the industry. The union vote came immediately after the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) found that Activision Blizzard illegally threatened staff and enforced a social media policy that conflicted with employees’ organization rights — allegations the company denied.

Raven Software’s union is also the second games union in North America after remote indie games studio Vodeo Games formed Vodeo Games Union in December. This union represents both full-time and contract workers spread out through the U.S. and Canada.

Cristina Alexander
Gaming/Mobile Writer
Cristina Alexander is a gaming and mobile writer at Digital Trends. She blends fair coverage of games industry topics that…
Valve just made the Steam Deck OLED much more expensive
Steam Deck OLED now costs enough to emotionally damage gamers
The Steam Deck OLED on a pink background.

Valve has officially raised the prices of the Steam Deck OLED in the US and several other global markets, and the increases are substantial. The move makes the company the latest major gaming platform holder to hike hardware pricing amid rising component costs and ongoing global economic pressures.

The biggest shock comes from the higher-end models. The 1TB Steam Deck OLED now costs $950 in the US, up from its original $650 launch price. Meanwhile, the 512GB OLED version has jumped from $550 to $790.

Read more
The Witcher 3 is dragging Geralt out of retirement for one last hunt
CD Projekt Red has announced a third expansion for 2027, with Fool’s Theory helping build a new adventure for PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC
Person, Samurai, Adult

CD Projekt Red is sending Geralt back to The Witcher 3. The studio has announced Songs of the Past, a third expansion for Wild Hunt coming in 2027 to PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC.

The news pulls a decade-old RPG back into the center of the conversation. The Witcher 3 expansion puts players on the Path with Geralt of Rivia again, with Fool’s Theory co-developing alongside the studio.

Read more
GTA 6 scammers are cashing in before Rockstar sells a single copy
Fake GTA 6 beta traps are preying on impatient fans
Lucia and her partner rob a store in GTA 6.

While some gamers are mourning the GTA 6's old release date passing by (May 26), there are others who are being lured into scams. Rockstar Games has yet to release its most anticipated games ever, and there's no official public beta either. But scammers have decided that this is the perfect time to start hunting impatient fans.

The report from NordVPN's Threat Intelligence team found that cybercriminals are exploiting massive interest around Grand Theft Auto VI with fake installers, bogus beta access, Android adware, and phishing pages. This arrives as the studio is expected to kick off pre-orders for the game, which is currently set to debut on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and Series S on no

Read more