EXCLUSIVE… The Elder Scrolls fans are furious as the highly anticipated new game has been cancelled out of the blue! đĄ
What led to this shocking decision? The fans are not holding back their anger⌠and the real reason behind it might surprise you. đ
The next project from the developer behind one of the most popular Elder Scrolls titles has just been cancelled, following reports that several members of staff have been let go.
You may have already heard this bit, but hereâs the relevant recap if not: yesterday afternoon, Microsoft announced that roughly 9,100 staff members across several different teams, including Candy Crush developer King and Bethesda Softworks, have lost their jobs.
The bad news, unfortunately, did not end there.
Rareâs next title, Everwild, has been cancelled following news of the layoffs. Then the news hit that the Xbox-owned developer The Initiative had been shut down, and their upcoming Perfect Dark reboot has also been cancelled.
Microsoftâs firing spree didnât end there, however, as weâve now learned that ZeniMax Online Studiosâ next title, which was working under the title Project Blackbird, has also been scrapped. Man, you know things are bad when I have to look up a synonym for âcancelledâ.
This news comes via Bloombergâs Jason Schreier in a post on Bluesky, in which he stated that âThis morning, Zenimax Online Studios told staff that their MMO project Blackbird was canceled and abruptly deactivated the team’s access to Slack.â
The report was later corroborated by PC Gamerâs Andy Chalk, who noted that several ZeniMax Online employees have revealed that theyâve been fired in posts on LinkedIn.
ZeniMax Online Studios is best known for developing The Elder Scrolls Online, which theyâve been supporting with constant updates since its release back in 2014. According to several sources, theyâd been working on Project Blackbird for roughly eight years (prior to its cancellation).
I usually like to end these news posts with a silly little joke or some kind of recap, but doing either in the wake of an eight-year-long project being cancelled and thousands of people losing their jobs doesnât seem appropriate this time around.
Maybe you should have reconsidered that 66 billion dollar acquisition of Activision-Blizzard if you donât have enough money to pay your employees, Microsoft.