Splinter Cell: Blacklist and Rayman: Legends have failed to reach sales targets, Ubisoft admits, according to comments made during an investors conference call today.
Hanzala from eXputer: "With Ubisoft's practices becoming increasingly anti-consumer lately, the destruction of The Sands of Time Remake looks almost inevitable."
Hey Ubi, here's a gun, don't shoot yourself in the foot.
*Ubi takes gun, aims at foot, empties clip*
Top executives including games boss Sean Shoptaw have also been promoted…
Behind XDefiant's toxic work culture, crunch, delays, and a group of directors and managers internally referred to as 'The Boys Club'.
Man the industry just keeps on going with all this bs and to think this is ubisoft again remember what happened with that skull bones team same crap.
https://www.theverge.com/20...
This game will be tossed out broken unplolished with a bloated budget trying to be cod but will fail sense ubi can get there shit in order. If i was me i would have gotten rid of this boys club asap there is alot looking for work out there.
Every industry has these issues
Some companies I’ve worked for were great and some were toxic as hell (UPS when I was a teenager was extremely toxic and I have heard it still is) It all starts at the top. They either hold people accountable , set standards and treat people with respect or the crap rolls downhill.
Doesn't surprise me, take away Michael Ironside from an already milked franchise and this is what happens.
SC : Conviction didnt meet expectations either, Splinter Cell just isnt a mega selling game or maybe people just want 'Chaos Theory 2'
a $60 2d platformer is a tough sell. Rayman legends could have been broken up into smaller games over time.
I'm not saying that legends isn't worth it, just that 2d platformers do better in the <$20 price range
It's kind of their own fault. They put SC out on the same day as several other big/medium games then Rayman awkwardly between that and GTA.
If rayman would have had online co-op i would have picked it up. My opinion my money