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Bobby Kotick speaks at DICE convention, reveals he isn't Lucifer.

Archie

Second-rate Anihawk
http://kotaku.com/5474949/bobby-kotick-warm-and-fuzzy-defends-notorious-no+fun-statements

Bobby Kotick, head of Activision, thought he was Luke, not Vader. And he didn't mean that thing about wanting to make game-making no fun.

"I don't know how this happened, but all my life I was the rebel flying the Millennium Falcon or the X-Wing fighter and suddenly I wake up and I'm on board the Death Star." That's the second quip Activision's oft-vilified CEO said to start his talk at the DICE gaming convention today. His first was a joke about the height of his microphone, set not for his height (he's short) but for former EA chief Larry Probst.

Mistakes, Kotick has made a few and he was ready to admit them today.

Most notorious was a late 2009 comment he made that seemed to cement his position as more Vader thank Luke. No, he said today, he didn't mean to sound like, his words, "a dick."

In September he had told a group of investors: "The goal that I had in bringing a lot of the packaged goods folks into Activision about 10 years ago was to take all the fun out of making video games."


Today, he said, after describing Activision as a company striving for greatness, "Sometimes that commitment to excellence, well, you can come across as being like a dick. And when I say things like 'taking the fun out of making video games,' it was a line that has been often-quoted lately, but it was a line I used for investors. It was mainly because i wanted to somehow come across in a humorous way that we were responsible, in the way we made our games in that it wasn't some wild west, lack of process exercise and that we really did give some thought to the capital being used to provide a return of investment to shareholders. So I say things like 'taking the fun out of video games' knowing full well that all we're actually trying to do is keep the fun in the process because, as most of you know, when you're getting into crunch time it becomes really difficult to meet those milestones or get things polished the way you would like, that isn't a lot of fun. That is not what I meant by it."

The Kotick speech today was one of of putting on the good face of Activision and the man at the podium here at the Red Rock Casino. Kotick admitted that he's sometimes been so much the businessman that he's cost his shareholders money by not remembering to get close to game creators. "Sometime what winds up happening when you are 50,000 feet above is you can get insulated from that creative passion."

Blizzard? He should have bought them sooner. He had thought that a subscription version of World of Warcraft was "the silliest thing" he'd ever heard of.

Maxis? "When Maxis was getting sold everyone was being sold on Sim City 2000 being this fantastic product that was incredibly late and wasn't coming out." Kotick went to visit some executives at the company. In another office, Will Wright was working on a game called Jefferson. Kotick didn't meet with Wright. No one could explain the game to him. What Kotick missed was the game that would become the Sims.

For a CEO who has been vilified as a business-first enemy of video game creativity, Kotick wanted to reveal that he has made mistakes staying too distant from passionate game creators.

The most vivid example he gave was how he handled the purchase of the Guitar Hero brand and blew off the talented studio, Harmonix, that had built them, prioritizing the Guitar Hero franchise owner Red Octane and handing the development of the series to Activision-run Neversoft.

"When we were buying Guitar Hero, or buying Red Octane, the makers of Guitar Hero, we knew about Harmonix," Kotick said. "We had always known them as sort of somewhat a failed developer of music games." Activision decided that their own studio, Neversoft, made good games, so they would make Guitar Hero from now on, not the Boston-based Harmonix. He said that had Activision met with Harmonix, things would have been very different.

That's Bobby Kotick saying sorry. Note that Harmonix, now owned by MTV Games and creating the Rock Band games, has been distributed by Activision rival EA since then. That distribution deal is set to expire next month.

Kotick was warm and fuzzy, zip-up sweater over polo shirt, no suit and not much business talk. He was reminiscing in his 20s, the ex history of art major spending about $400,000 for a stake in Activision, a company he was worried was losing its soul. He wanted to explain that he was a gamer originally, then a businessman, one with apologies for some of the creators he may have ignored or insulted — and of course a company to brag about now.

"I loved Zork," he said of his gaming days. "I loved Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I loved the whole idea behind Activision." That idea was that it was the anti-Atari, the company that rebelled against the corporate attitude of Atari and would champion creators.

He recalled scheming in the late 80s with his friend who had started a hedge fund to try to buy Commodore. "I tried for a bout a year to acquire control of Commodore," he said. He thought it could be turned into a great 16-bit console. The Commodore console could be better than the 8-bit Nintendo Entertainment System being sold in Japan at the time, he recalled himself thinking.

Kotick went from gamer to game maker to businessman. Kotick said he's not playing many games anymore. He's a single dad with three daughters and is wary of the kind of developer he would become, knowing his addictive personality (He confessed he is "addicted to food"). Did he used to be an avid gamer? "I still have callouses from Defender. I still wake up in the middle of the night and see the words 'Use key to open door.'" Does he play now? Not much: "If I was regularly playing Modern Warfare 2 I would not be able to stop and it would be at the expense of all my other responsibilities."

Kotick said that Activision is a company that supports creators and champions vision. He took barely-veiled shots at EA, comparing his interest and efforts in the past to help start companies such as Jamdat and Pandemic with the eventual fates of those companies now folded into EA and, in the case of Pandemic, shut down as an independent entity.

"If you have a company and you want to protect your creative freedom and the integrity of the creative process, if you want to retain your identity and culture, if you want the support of the mothership and the resources of the mothership, we're a really great mothership. But if you want to sell out and move on, there are definitely other companies to talk to."

Kotick made no mention of the deep cuts Activision announced earlier this week nor of the couple of hundred developers who were let go. He focused on projecting a game developer-friendly image and announced the start of a $500,000 independent games development contest.

tl;dr:

Kotick thought WoW was dumb
Kotick missed the opportunity to publish The Sims
Kotick wishes that Harmonix had continued on the Guitar Hero franchise
Kotick might not be a hellspawn as originally thought.
 

Nirolak

Mrgrgr
Kotick said:
Kotick said that Activision is a company that supports creators and champions vision. He took barely-veiled shots at EA, comparing his interest and efforts in the past to help start companies such as Jamdat and Pandemic with the eventual fates of those companies now folded into EA and, in the case of Pandemic, shut down as an independent entity.

"If you have a company and you want to protect your creative freedom and the integrity of the creative process, if you want to retain your identity and culture, if you want the support of the mothership and the resources of the mothership, we're a really great mothership. But if you want to sell out and move on, there are definitely other companies to talk to."
I feel this might hold more weight if they had not just shut down Neversoft, RedOctane, Luxoflux, Underground Development, and laid off half of Radical.


But if he does feel like being sincere about these sentiments, I fully support the notion.
 

clip

Member
Actions speak louder than words. Maybe he shouldn't be shutting down studios and firing hundreds of people when his company is doing so well.
 
D

Deleted member 20415

Unconfirmed Member
I'll say it again... if you read the interview he did in Game Informer a couple months ago, then you've heard this speech before.

That interview was the start of a PR blast to improve his image. This is just a continuation of that.

Kotick has some nerve talking about supporting developers just after he culled 500 jobs and shuttered development studios.

Ignore his silver tongue.
 

Wario64

works for Gamestop (lol)
So basically he's sorry that he blew off Will Wright and Harmonix and wished that he could have eliminated the competition from the get-go.
 

Cipherr

Member
TheGreatDave said:
The Devil is a master of deceit.

This,

cmon, on the heels of what they just did to a studio? Didnt we JUST have a thread about a shit load of layoff from these guys. [churchladyvoice] THE DEVIL IS A LIE!
 
Those statements he made had always been taken out of context. It was obvious what he meant. And equally obvious that people loathe him for his business decisions, not stuff he gets quoted on.
 
clip said:
Actions speak louder than words. Maybe he shouldn't be shutting down studios and firing hundreds of people when his company is doing so well.

A good CEO would be forward looking. If the industry outlook for 2010 steers towards contraction it would be his job to foresee that and make cuts ahead of time to maintain profits. THese aren't charities.
 
Nirolak said:
I feel this might hold more weight if they had not just shut down Neversoft, RedOctane, Luxoflux, Underground Development, and laid off half of Radical.

Timing is everything.

And that ain't spin on that "bringing in packaged goods people to take the fun out of games." That's like saying the point of taking medicine is suffering the bitter taste, and damn to hell if it cures the illness.
 
I've always firmly believed Kotick is out to make a profitable business and make money, not be cartoonishly evil like it's easy to reduce distant, well-known people down to.

That said, he just laid off, what, two or three hundred people? There were better times for this speech, man.
 
Why is he taking shots at EA shutting down their studios when he just shut down 3-4 studios and fired half of the guys that made Prototype ?
 

Macmanus

Member
Hey Bobby, you know how EA got it's reputation mildly out of the shitter? By rolling the dice on some fresh IP. Not shitty oration by their big wigs.
 

SapientWolf

Trucker Sexologist
ShockingAlberto said:
I've always firmly believed Kotick is out to make a profitable business and make money, not be cartoonishly evil like it's easy to reduce distant, well-known people down to.

That said, he just laid off, what, two or three hundred people? There were better times for this speech, man.
"Activision is a company that supports creators and champions vision," Kotick quipped, as he fires hundreds of talented staff during a recessionary economy so he can re-focus company efforts on farming out soulless sequels.
Yeah.
 

Tiktaalik

Member
Game Life has a slightly different take:

Kotick’s comments on the music game business come as the genre is experiencing a downturn. Sales of music games, led by Guitar Hero and Rock Band, were down significantly in 2009. Last week, an analyst with Electronic Entertainment Design and Research said that 90 percent of the year-on-year decline in January’s U.S. videogame sales is attributable to the flagging music genre.

Activision said last week that it would close Red Octane as part of its plan to release fewer Guitar Hero games in 2010.

Kotick pitched Activision as a better creative partner than other industry players. “If you want to retain your identity and culture, we’re a really great mothership,” he said. “If you want to sell out … there are definitely other companies to talk to,” he continued, to scattered applause.


Hmmm yes these things add up. Scattered applause indeed.

I'm sure most of the folks there could barely contain yelling "Sham!" at the guy.
 

dsister44

Member
ackbar.gif


I dont trust him
 

MetatronM

Unconfirmed Member
El_TigroX said:
I'll say it again... if you read the interview he did in Game Informer a couple months ago, then you've heard this speech before.

That interview was the start of a PR blast to improve his image. This is just a continuation of that.

Kotick has some nerve talking about supporting developers just after he culled 500 jobs and shuttered development studios.

Ignore his silver tongue.
Is this even a silver tongue? Everything in here reads either as an excuse, empty PR catchphrases, or, at best, backhanded compliments. Both the sections about Maxis and Harmonix say "I wanted to make money off of these people's work, but I didn't want to take even the tiny effort required to actually have a meeting with them in order to be able to do it." And that's supposed to be a positive statement?

And that same guy, who also just shut down a whole bunch of studios, is also totally about embracing the creative and working for passion rather than selling out? Really? Does he honestly think we're stupid enough to believe his bullshit?

And really, what difference does it make? All of the major publishers have executives at the top who act in the best interest of the company's bottom line when it's all said and done, and they aren't making excuses for it (mostly). Kotick only draws attention because he says some profoundly stupid things publicly, and he has a history of making profoundly stupid decisions while simultaneously managing to grow the company into the monster it is despite all that by virtue of a few good lucky breaks. Some of which he's already ruined by overmilking them, like what happened with Guitar Hero.
 

Smash88

Banned
Nice try dick head. I'm sure no one will fall for that anymore.

One of the ways to even start gaining fans back is to fix what you have ruined and what has made Activision, PC gamers. Start from the source. I still haven't play MW2 to this day, but hey guess what I'm going to be playing soon, Battlefield Bad Company 2.
 

WanderingWind

Mecklemore Is My Favorite Wrapper
El_TigroX said:
I'll say it again... if you read the interview he did in Game Informer a couple months ago, then you've heard this speech before.

That interview was the start of a PR blast to improve his image. This is just a continuation of that.

Kotick has some nerve talking about supporting developers just after he culled 500 jobs and shuttered development studios.

Ignore his silver tongue.


Yeah, this is PR 101. I would know...it's my business. He's not even deviating from the script in separate interviews.
 
So basically they did some research and saw that Kotick's attitude was having a negative effect on sales, so now he's trying to be the good guy.
 

KevinCow

Banned
"Hey guys, Star Wars reference! Gamers are nerds, right? And nerds like Star Wars? I'm referencing Star Wars so I'm totally just like you guys!"
 

dsister44

Member
i for for a thread title change to Bobby Kotick speaks at DICE conventio, reveals he is Darth Vadar



he seemed to be portraying himself as anakin skywalker, how he started off all good but then got corrupted by the dark side(money) an is now roaming round the galaxy blowing up planets a.k.a alderaan a.k.a. neversoft
 

bdouble

Member
Don't really have an opinion on the guy. They do what they want. Very few publishers are in touch with their community. Hell few developers have insight into the community but to us it usually just comes of as being evil but w/e. Give me good games. I don't see them loosing many blizzard game sales over the guy.
El_TigroX said:
Kotick has some nerve talking about supporting developers just after he culled 500 jobs and shuttered development studios.
And if you ran the company it wouldn't exist any more and even more people would be without work.

Layoffs are a part of growing a business. Its a constant state of flux and things change. With small changes come inefficiencies and over a period of time they become out of hand. Overlap in management and horrible structure.

Its not the end of the world for these people. As an employee you need to realize your expendable. Just like a piece of machinery. Thing is in this country we have a chance to do something else.
 

dsister44

Member
markot said:
Han would have shot first had Kotick tried to board his ship!


you'd need a ship that could do the Kessel run way faster than 4 parsecs to outrun Kotick, he'd just capture the falcon and make endless copies but remove dedicated targeting systems


(how far can we go with this?)
 
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