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Former Bungie lawyer says the studio's 'management failure' led to Sony 'forcing them to get their heads out of their asses'

Over the weekend, former Bungie general counsel Don McGowan gave his take on the ongoing turmoil at Bungie and the recent redirection for Destiny 2. «Much though it pains me to say this, it appears that Sony's inflicting some discipline on my former colleagues may have forced them to fix the things that were wrong with the game,» McGowan said in a LinkedIn post published on Saturday.

«To be clear: I’m not talking about the layoffs,» McGowan continued. «I’m talking about forcing them to get their heads out of their asses and focus on things like: implementing a method of new player acquisition; not just doing fan service for the fans in the Bungie C-suite; and running the game like a business. Good. I still have friends in that environment and I’d like them to keep jobs.»

McGowan's LinkedIn post was a response to Bungie's reveal last week of its new plans for Destiny 2's content structure, which will abandon its major, annual releases of linear story expansions in favor of smaller, more-frequent updates with a greater emphasis on repeatable activities. The shift in Destiny 2 strategy follows Bungie's two rounds of major layoffs since Sony acquired the studio for $3.6 billion in 2022.

In the July 2024 announcement that Bungie was laying off 220 employees—around 17% of its staff—CEO Pete Parsons called the downsizing «a necessary decision to refocus our studio,» brought about by «rising costs of development and industry shifts as well as enduring economic conditions.» In his LinkedIn post, however, McGowan said the continuing uncertainty at Bungie is a product of the studio leadership's mismanagement.

According to McGowan, who'd been Bungie's general counsel from 2020 to 2023, studio executives were intent on continuing to operate as though it was an independent company, even after the Sony acquisition. «There were a lot of egos for whom it was important to pretend that 'nothing would change,'» McGowan said. «I remember sitting there during the deal saying, 'Do you

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