In the latest proof that 'job security' is simply not a thing in the videogame industry, Funcom says the survival MMO , which launched to great success earlier this year, is "the biggest release we’ve had in our 32-year long history of making great games." And so now it's laying off employees.
"[Dune] has already shown incredible potential, and the right way forward is to focus our internal resources on releasing new content, features, and enhancements," Funcom said in a statement provided to .
The layoffs at Funcom are the first of October, although based on precedent I don't imagine they'll be the last. It comes just a day after Just Cause studio announced the closure of its Liverpool studio and layoffs at its Malmö and Stockholm operations, which appear to be a consequence of the layoff of roughly 9,000 people made by Microsoft in July—a bloodbath that was, ironically, also announced with a bizarre statement about how business has "." [[link]] September also saw layoffs at , which launched Civilization 7 in February.