Blizzard president J. Allen Brack is leaving♛ Activision Blizzard, with Jen Oneal and Mike Ybarra set to take over as co-leader🦄s.

“I am pleased to announce that, effective immediately… Jen and Mike will share responsibility for development and operational accountability for the company,” Activision Blizzard stated in a press release. “Both are leaders of great character and integrity and are deeply committed to ensuring o💜ur workplace is the most inspired, welcoming environment for creative excellence and to upholding our highest game development standards.”

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Oneal has beꦡen with Activision Blizzard ♚for 18 years and was the former head of Vicarious Visions. Meanwhile, Ybarra has been in the gaming industry for 20 years, with seven of those being spent as a senior executive at Xbox.

In an email to staff, Activision B﷽lizzard president Daniel Alegre said that Brack was “leaving the company to pursue new opportunities.” However, as spotted, Activision Blizzard earnings are today.

Content warning: details of abuse and suicide follow.

On July 20, the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing filed a lawsuit against Activision Blizzard following years of investigation into stories of women being subjected to harassment and abuse in the workplace. One woman committed suicide on a business trip after nude photos of her were allegedly handed around the office without her consent. Various employees have since shared their own stories online, while a major walkout took place last week. Apologies were issued, although it was soon revealed that Activision Blizzard had hired th🦩e same union-busting firm that Amazon uses.

Only recently, CCO Fran Townsend - who previously defended the use of torture methods in terrorism-related interrogations - sent a letter out to employees about the lawsuit, calling it “distorted” and “untrue.” Townsend also came under fire recently for 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:tweeting an Atlantic article with the caption, “The Problem WIth Whistleblowing.” Following critique from employees regarding this, ജshe blocked several Activision Blizzard staff members on Twitter.

CEO Bobby Kotick later admitted the initial response was “tone-deaf&rdquo🐟;. While J. Allen Brack has stepped doꦚwn, Townsend appears to still be working at Activision Blizzard.

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