By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Angelus said:
Ryuu96 said:

I stand by that Microsoft shouldn't have cancelled it, I know for a fact if they did we'd have articles ripping them apart, announced or not, it'd be "Microsoft Acquires Bethesda Then Immediately Cancels Projects From Beloved Arkane" and the public would rip them apart just as much as they are now, if not more. In addition to that, Harvey and Ricardo actually wanting to do the game too makes things awkward.

Who cares what fucking articles get written. MS needs to worry about what's best for the long term health and productivity of their studios, not what's going to be said by people with little to no insight. If you go check in on the happenings at the studio, and they're pulling a dozen different directions, and leadership and the main dev force aren't on the same page as to what type of game they're making (or whether they even wanna make it at all), you gotta make a tough call. And that call isn't "oh well...let's just keep going like this until the game is done, and figure things out after."

MS ABSOLUTELY should have either canned it, or gotten the team on the same page, and rebooted the project. 

1. Negative PR can be detrimental to a company, as we've seen when Xbox went from Xbox 360 highs to being a joke with Xbox One. We still have people today bitching about Microsoft for Scalebound and they were slaughtered by the media and gamers at the time of cancellation even though we had no information, even when information came out, people still blamed Microsoft.

2. The article very much suggests that Harvey Smith and Ricardo DID want to make Redfall, so if they cancelled it you could very well end up with "Harvey Smith and Ricardo angry at Microsoft for meddling, both leave Arkane" They're damned if they do, damned if they don't, either way some group will be mad. Likely Microsoft didn't even know the state it was in (hence why they should be more hands on) to even consider cancelling it when both Zenimax Management and Redfall Management were hyping the project up behind closed doors and in public.

3. We have no idea when those "70%" left, as that is across the entire project, for all we know, the vast majority left before Microsoft even acquired Zenimax and by then it was obviously already too late to save them and the rest of the employees who remained were maybe the ones who believed in Redfall. I would strongly suspect most people who didn't want to work on Redfall would have left near the start.

Last edited by Ryuu96 - on 01 June 2023