investors.unity.com

Aceticon, (edited ) do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

It’s one thing to bet “$50” on “it’s going to be fine” like lots of gamers did after what EA did with this guy at the helm, it’s a whole different thing to bet “my company and livelihood” on “it’s going to be fine” after what Unity did with this guy at the helm.

Unity is in B2B, not B2C, so the stakes are way higher for customers and so are the guarantees that customers require to keep on doing business with Unity after such an outrageous attempt at screwing them.

The incompetence level of the Board of Unity must be trully world-beating given that they’re still acting as if the stakes for their customers in trusting Unity again were anywhere near the same as the stakes for teenage gamers to keep on buying games from EA after being basically scammed.

There’s going to have to be some ironclad legal guarantees that this will never happen again and a purge of the Unity Board before at least those customers with the most to loose (i.e. the ones with successful games, either paying Unity directly or indirectly by using their Ad network) walk back from their decision of protecting their businesses from future similar actions by the management of Unity (such protection being mainly ditching Unity for future or early-stage projects).

echodot,

I’m pretty sure that if they’d actually tried to keep going in the route they were going with the rules they’d have been sued out of existence. It was almost definitely illegal so it baffles me that they tried to do it.

LiveLM, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Too little, too late 👋

arc, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Probably too late for Unity. A commercial game engine only makes money if there is a constant influx of new games to sustain it. I bet a lot of developers, large and small, have already decided to dump the platform either immediately or for their next project. So revenues are going to go into free fall.

Devs will move to Unreal (powerful) or Godot (free) and Unity will die. And it’s all thanks to John here and the other members of the board who thought squeezing people for $$$ who have choices was a good idea.

PhlubbaDubba,

There’s also Bevy, which can infect them with the Rust mind controlling slime that makes them swear up and down that it’s an amazing game engine because it runs on Rust.

It is actually pretty good though the folks developing it are putting their A Game into it even if it’s still technically in the development phase.

Elderos,

Unity is not going anywhere, even in a bankruptcy it would get acquired by the likes of Microsoft or Meta. The “good guys startup” Unity is long gone, and it’s been replaced by the same corporate structure you would expect anywhere.

Tying yourself to Unreal would be just as naive, and Godot is nowhere ready to fill the niche Unity is filling. I would place the opposite bet as yours, the vast majority of actual game devs are not rich enough nor care enough about corporate drama to ever switch engine for possibly worst. Also, experienced C# Unity devs and experienced C++ Unreal devs are not that interchangeable. Unity made this move to survive and they know there is no true alternative.

This is my pov, I worked in the industry for over a decade and I am an Unity ex-employee.

arc,

Who on earth would rely on a game engine in bankruptcy? Would you get support? Would you get product keys? Would backend services get turned off? Who would collect revenues and would the terms change again? I think Unity has already done itself irreparable damage and if it ends in bankruptcy then blame the outgoing CEO. Engines need a constant conveyor belt of new games to sustain their revenues and I don’t see this happening. If the company is bought it will just be to pick the bones of a dead platform, collecting revenues from games out in the wild.

And yes there is pain and a learning curve to moving to other engines though I think most programmers would be able to cope with change and if they’re that incurious and inflexible that they can’t then maybe it’s time to find new programmers. I expect most teams will jump to another engine at a natural break in the development process, e.g. after completing a game and moving onto the next and they might start on a smaller project and work up to familiarise themselves with their new tools.

As for Godot, I am sure it is not a 100% feature for feature replacement for Unity. But it sure as hell is capable of powering 95% of indie games out there no trouble whatsoever and I daresay some more challenging titles. Another compelling reason for devs to reevaluate their relationship with Unity.

Elderos,

Who on earth would rely on a game engine in bankruptcy?

They aren’t nearing bankruptcy first of all, and I as I mentioned even in this doom-and-gloom scenario they would likely just get acquired and operations would continue as normal. Is that what you think? That Unity is about to go bankrupt? I am not sure what we’re arguing here.

Engines need a constant conveyor belt of new games to sustain their revenues and I don’t see this happening.

What are you basing this observation on? Unity never made money from the volume of games released using their engine. Also, the part where everyone is suddenly dropping Unity is mostly just a narrative here on social media, and the bulk of the reason why it might not be happening is that there is no true alternative.

And yes there is pain and a learning curve to moving to other engines though I think most programmers would be able to cope with change and if they’re that incurious and inflexible that they can’t then maybe it’s time to find new programmers

It is not about coping and being incurious. Changing engine means trashing a part of your team, trashing your content pipeline, trashing your internal tools. It costs a lot of money, money which most studios don’t have. It would make sense if there was a true alternative to Unity for those mid-sized studios, which there isn’t.

As for Godot, I am sure it is not a 100% feature for feature replacement for Unity. But it sure as hell is capable of powering 95% of indie games out there no trouble whatsoever and I daresay some more challenging titles

Again, not sure what you’re basing those numbers on. Godot can’t even do consoles natively so there is definitely some troubles and headache in using Godot in 2023. I would agree that Godot is perfectly fine for solo devs and very, very small teams, but it is not a serious alternative for even mid-sized productions. It is still pretty much a toy compared to the bigger engines, and it lacks commercial support to really attract those studios.

I get it. The popular sentiment here is that Unity is doomed to fail, and the internet as a whole kind of wish it did. I am not gonna gather sympathy and votes by saying otherwise, but I just don’t see it. Godot is not ready, switching to Unreal does not make much sense since it is the same proprietary “garbage”. It is easy to make big statements here on Lemmy and claim how easy it would be for game studios to get rid of Unity, and how this would improve their business, but to be honest I don’t think you guys have a clue. If you are actually a developer or own a game studio then I am sorry for assuming.

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

You make a great point, and I want to add to that.

The popular sentiment here is that Unity is doomed to fail, and the internet as a whole kind of wish it did.

A lot of people confuse their wishes with the observable reality. There were a lot of people that migrated to lemmy and thought reddit would die in 3 months, tops. Many people are still waiting for Xitter to suffer a “sudden death”. Unity is in a similar situation, it’s too big to simply close down and file for bankruptcy.

The shitstorm made some people migrate away from it, just like people migrated off reddit when fuck u/spez started fucking things around, and twitter when elon musk took over. Yet all of them survived with healthy-ish userbases, despite many people wishing otherwise.

Things a lot of people forget or ignore for whatever reason is the sheer volume of shovelware produced with Unity, aimed straight at Google Play and Microsoft Stores. Asian studios targeting Asian audiences are probably the highest source of income for Unity, due to sheer numbers (China, India and other SE Asian countries are roughly half of the world population). Unity gets money from “per seat” subscriptions and from advertising. Even assuming a 20% reduction of those subscriptions, there’s still enough money coming in to keep the company going, especially if they decide to axe sectors that are “money drains”.

Also, some studios simply can’t afford to let go of Unity because their main income earners are made with Unity and they need to keep the game updated. If their games also use stuff they can’t easily replicate in a different engine, like some plugin, that’s an extra reason for them to put up with Unity’s shit. I also wouldn’t be surprised if Unity’s now previous license of “no royalties” was preferred over Unreal and the reason some studios went with it, as the subscription cost would be lower than paying “success fees”, with Honkai/Genshin Impact being likely examples.

Unlike Twitter or Reddit, Unity is in a better position to make a slow comeback. Whether they’ll manage remains to be seen, but even assuming all the worst choices taken by the higher ups, the company will live for a good 2 years as is, then sell out to someone bigger.

echodot,

Unity was been a massive need of an update anyway and just wasn’t getting it. Something like this was always going to happen. This whole debacle has only accelerated it.

All they could have spent some money and upgraded Unity, but clearly that was never going to happen.

StarServal, do gaming w Unity Technologies - Unity Announces Leadership Transition
@StarServal@kbin.social avatar

The king is dead, long live the king.

Polpota, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Look, Unity that backed the changes of the fall guy have removed the fall guy they backed. Now they wait a couple years and use the idea later to hopefully less backlash with a new fall guy who they can remove if the backlash is bad again.

Chunk,

And what a sweet deal it is for the fall guy.

“Hey we need to roll out an unpopular policy change. If you agree to take the PR hit we’ll give you $30 million”

Best gig in a lifetime.

TheDarkKnight, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Fucked the whole company and bails

psmgx,

Standard CEO strategy. Probably got a gold parachute lined up

Computerchairgeneral, do gaming w Unity Technologies - Unity Announces Leadership Transition

Great. I'm looking forward to seeing what company he lands at and tries to self-destruct next.

Kinglink, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

The board that allowed him to present and push the idea forward is still there. The power structure that wanted this change is still there.

Riccitello is gone (and fuck him for many reasons) but Unity isn’t changed, it just has a different face.

HughJanus,

I mean the board that HIRED him is still there. No one hires a guy like that and would be surprised about what they got.

Kinglink,

“You’re the guy who put Microtransactions into FIFA? Come on in and sit down!”

They always knew.

Infynis, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity
@Infynis@midwest.social avatar

Roelof Botha, Lead Independent Director of the Unity Board, has been appointed Chairman.

Imagine working in gaming with an actual name that’s just the beginning of a Deez Nuts joke

red, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Jim Whitehurst? The guy who sold Red Hat to IBM? Cool, cool, cool. Cool.

Shadywack, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity
@Shadywack@lemmy.world avatar

This fuckhead reminds me a lot of Phil Harrison, or several other high profile execs. They go around, middling performance and wordsmithing to do fundraising rounds. By all metrics they don’t do anything noteworthy except they get to be the one who lands in leadership roles at established companies, they siphon some salary and stock options for a while and hold lots of unproductive meetings internally while doing some hand wavey shit.

Zero accountability, pipedream visions that don’t materialize, and then they leave to go fuck something else up.

Modva, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

Don’t care, still looking at other engines. Public companies are poison.

altima_neo, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity
@altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

Wonder where he’s going next?

He used to be EA’s CEO

pivot_root,

Preferably Epic. Pull the same shit again, then Godot gets even more funding.

DocMcStuffin, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity
@DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world avatar

So, his replacement is going to walk back this cluster-you-know-what, right? Right?

crickets

sosodev,

They already walked it back. The changes are fairly negligible at this point.

IWantToFuckSpez, do games w John Riccitiello is stepping down as CEO and president of Unity

He did what he was hired to. Take the company public, turn the founders into billionaires and become the scapegoat when things go south.

LanternEverywhere, (edited )

Unless there's something I'm not aware of (which is very possible), what you said doesn't make sense. The company was already publicly traded (so no IPO to pump up the numbers for), and none of the recent moves he made increased the stock price.

foips,

JR joined many years before it went public

IWantToFuckSpez, (edited )

Dude was specifically hired for the IPO, he was hired in 2014 and the IPO was in 2020. So what you said doesn’t make sense. And before you say how do you know he was hired for the IPO. It’s a pattern that you see all the time. Founders step down, hire a CEO with experience, new CEO packs the board and c-suite to make the company seem more legit (probably packs the board with people suggested by the IPO underwriter) and raise capital to pump the value and get the valuation mentioned in the news. And boom company goes public a couple of years later.

Also the founders sold a shit ton of shares when the stock was around the peak. And even with the low price of today the founders are probably still billionaires.

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