Men_in_Boxes
Snake Oil Salesman
In March of 2018, Shawn Layden left his position at PlayStation. There were rumors that Layden did not leave on good terms. His departure was abrupt. David Jaffe said he heard he was fired from his contact at PlayStation and I believe Layden liked a controversial Tweet suggesting everything was not copacetic between him and PlayStation later that year. Fast forward a few months and PlayStation goes on a huge Live Service hiring spree.
Yesterday, Shawn Layden goes on a podcast and answers the following question. His response is time stamped...
Question: "Live Service games seem risky with most of them failing. Why is PlayStation going so heavy into the (Live Service) market? [Paraphrase]
The quote that jumps out is... "In practice, there's a very small handful of games that can do it. There's only so many of those games the market can tolerate...The idea you can have 10 or 20 of those games successful, in the market at the same time, is just unrealistic."
Guild Wars 2 is the 198th most played game on Steam right now. It's still getting updates in 2024. There's a number of highly successful Live Service games not available on Steam.
Was Shawn Layden pushed out because he didn't fundamentally understand the growing Live Service market?
Yesterday, Shawn Layden goes on a podcast and answers the following question. His response is time stamped...
Question: "Live Service games seem risky with most of them failing. Why is PlayStation going so heavy into the (Live Service) market? [Paraphrase]
The quote that jumps out is... "In practice, there's a very small handful of games that can do it. There's only so many of those games the market can tolerate...The idea you can have 10 or 20 of those games successful, in the market at the same time, is just unrealistic."
Guild Wars 2 is the 198th most played game on Steam right now. It's still getting updates in 2024. There's a number of highly successful Live Service games not available on Steam.
Was Shawn Layden pushed out because he didn't fundamentally understand the growing Live Service market?