Activision Blizzard Dev Says He Was Fired for Mocking Corporate Greed With a Loot Goblin

A World of Warcraft writer claims that Blizzard fired him after they discovered that he had written jokes in the MMORPG featuring a loot goblin that mocked corporate greed.

 

Eric Covington, a World of Warcraft quest team member, wrote the loot goblins, who drop treasure if they are defeated, but only if you catch them before they flee through a magic portal. The loot goblins originally came from the Diablo game, but they have appeared several times in World of Warcraft, such as during the Diablo 20th anniversary world event in 2017, or as “loot specialists” added in a Dragonflight update earlier this year. The loot specialists’ specialty was that they had a story-appropriate reason for their very video game behavior: they were members of the Venture Co. acquisition department – a goblin trade cartel that has been used to parody corporate malice since World of Warcraft’s early days.

When Covington wrote the loot specialists, he gave them lines like “Another record quarter for revenue!” or “No profit sharing!” without thinking much about it.

Until he was fired out of the blue, despite having worked at Blizzard for almost nine years.

Covington claims on Twitter that he was fired “because someone looked at an innocuous joke and saw a reflection.” It’s tempting to look over the dialogue and try to figure out if one specific phrase could have got him in trouble. Maybe “Time to go back to the office!” Or “Looks like another yacht for me!” perhaps? Covington goes on to say, “They made sure to hustle and get me out before the end of the month in full knowledge that benefits would expire the next day.” Making the whole thing particularly strange is the fact that, while Covington claims somebody high up enough to get him fired wasn’t a fan, the marketing team definitely was. They continued to use footage of loot specialists saying stereotypically greedy things like “I saw it first!” and “Let’s call this a cost-of-living adjustment!” in promotional tweets even after he was shown the door.

Covington says he would have “willingly and understandably helped” to replace whichever lines caused the problem if he’d been asked, but wasn’t given the chance. “In my email correspondence after termination,” he wrote, “I appealed them to reconsider their actions in light of a whole list of evidence I provided, including the fact that the content had to have been reviewed and approved to make it to the social media account and no issue was found.” Meanwhile, Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick says that everything is fine at Blizzard actually, and claims to the contrary were made up by an “aggressive labor movement” trying to “destabilize the company”. Reports that Kotick was last seen leaping through an escape portal with a sack over his shoulder have yet to be confirmed.

Source: PC Gamer

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