Weâve heard from two sources that there have been big layoffs at Gas Powered Games, the company that just launched a Kickstarter for $1.1 million to make their next game, Wildman
One source said these layoffs may be connected to the Kickstarterâs current performance, which you could argue has been disappointing, based on their goal. Right now, it has been up for four days and earned around $173,000
One source suggested that the company may be shutting down entirely.
UPDATE: Weâve heard from two more sources saying that almost everyone at the company has been laid off. According to one of these sources, the company has let go of everyone except CEO Chris Taylor and one or two people.
Located in Redmond, Washington, Gas Powered Games is the developer behind games like Dungeon Siege and Supreme Commander. Itâs run by Chris Taylor, who created the popular real-time strategy game Total Annihilation
Weâve reached out to both Taylor and a PR representative for the companyâs Kickstarter project. Weâll update should we hear back.
UPDATE 2: Chris Taylor has confirmed the layoffs. He sent over the following e-mail:
Hey Jason,
We do have a layoff, and weâll be updating our Kickstarter as well with details as well very soon. Iâm way behind, so many wonderful people to talk to and share stories with, so it just takes time. Itâs actually been a fairly positive experience, because I run a very open company and everyone knows whatâs going on.
Thanks!
Chris
UPDATE 3: Taylor has offered some further explanation to Gamasutra, saying, âThe studio is still operating, but we had to slim WAY down to conserve cash reserves.â
UPDATE 4: Taylor has offered a further bit of explanation to Joystiq, telling them that about 40 people have been âaffected by layoffsâ (Joystiqâs language), that the decision wasnât as sudden as it appeared to be, and that it will allow the company to pay severance and remaining paid time-off.
UPDATE 5: Taylor has made a lengthy statement via a video update to the Wildman Kickstarter page. He explains the reasoning behind the timing of the layoffs: If the company ran through the entire Kickstarter campaign and it failed, he says heâd have to let everyone go, shut the company down, and not give any paid time-off or severance. âThat,â he says, âI decided was not worth it.â
In the video, Taylor goes on to ask backers if he should continue the Kickstarter campaign. âNow that the team has been laid off,â he says, âshould I continue the campaign to see if the numbers do improve, and hire them back at the end of the campaign if they still want to come back and if they havenât found jobs? Or do I shut the campaign down tonight, or tomorrow, and call it done?â Taylor then asks people to vote with their comments, and says they will tabulate them. âDo we kill the campaign, or do we keep it going? Itâs up to you.â