Former EA Exec Blasts Current EA Execs for Incompetence

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
20,364
0
0
Former EA Exec Blasts Current EA Execs for Incompetence



Former EA mobile VP Mitch Lasky has added to the criticism at the John Riccitiello-helmed Electronic Arts, saying that the publisher "is in the wrong business."

It's not a good week to be leadership at Electronic Arts. First, heavily criticized [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/97404-EA-Comeback-Taking-Longer-Than-Expected] CEO John Riccitiello's performance leading the company, pointing to the publisher's slide in stock value since he took control.

Now, a former EA executive is backing them up - Mitch Lasky had been one of the men at the helm of EA Mobile, the cell-phone-games division, before departing the company for greener pastures. In a scathing post to his blog [http://bizpunk.blogspot.com/2010/01/after-bell-today-ea-announced-massive.html], Lasky lambasted the EA Games label for churning out unsuccessful, expensive titles, blaming it all on the failure of the company's leadership to adapt.

"EA is in the wrong business, with the wrong cost structure and the wrong team, but somehow they seem to think that it is going to be a smooth, two-year transition from packaged goods to digital. Think again," wrote Lasky. "EA's sports business has been hamstrung by vastly increased licensing costs and failure to transition to a subscription/variable pricing model. This has substantially reduced the profitability of a business that EA used to rely on to fund other, riskier bets."

Interestingly enough, one of Riccitiello's greatest failures (according to Lasky) has been something applauded by gamers and journalists alike - the man's focus on creating new IPs in order to grow the company has been risky and ultimately unfruitful, claimed Lasky, underscoring the statement with a belief that Dante's Inferno (I don't think that really counts as a "new IP?") and The Old Republic (for that matter, I don't think that one does either) would be failures.

"It's been a very ugly scene, indeed. From Dante's Inferno [http://www.amazon.com/Spore-Mac/dp/B000FKBCX4/ref=sr_1_1?s=videogames&ie=UTF8&qid=1280862653&sr=1-1], or Knights of the Old Republic (sic), is going to make it all better. It's a bankrupt strategy."

As much as I hate to admit it, the facts do seem to be on Lasky's side. For all the good that new IPs bring the industry, sequels are by far the most lucrative way to go in the business, and sequel-and-franchise-focused rival Activision has been laughing all the way to the bank for just that reason.

Are the days of the "new EA" numbered? For all we can brush off Lasky's accusations and applaud a major publisher for promoting new IPs and (relative) innovation, it's EA's investors that ultimately have their say - and at the end of the day, a title that doesn't sell is a title that investors won't back.

(Via GI.biz [http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/lasky-ea-is-in-the-wrong-business])

Permalink
 

Onyx Oblivion

Borderlands Addict. Again.
Sep 9, 2008
17,032
0
0
You see? More people need to buy new IPs and then they won't be "commercial disappointments".

I'm still happy that I paid 60 USD for Mirror's Edge.
 

sgtshock

New member
Feb 11, 2009
1,103
0
0
So this Mitch Lasky guy is saying that their financial troubles are the result of their recycled sports games not selling like wildfire like they used to?

Funny to think that those shitty games are what financially allowed games like Mirror's Edge and Dead Space to exist. Of course, it looks like that'll change now.
 

Avatar Roku

New member
Jul 9, 2008
6,169
0
0
Onyx Oblivion said:
You see? More people need to buy new IPs and then they won't be "commercial disappointments".

I'm still happy that I paid 60 USD for Mirror's Edge.
Agreed. I don't get why people disliked it, but even if I disliked it, I'd have been glad that I bought it just because it's a new IP, and helping new IPs, even ones we don't like, means that it will lead to other new IPs.
 

theaceplaya

New member
Jul 20, 2009
219
0
0
I guess public image doesn't count for anything anymore. Sounds like 'We don't care about the growth of the medium, as long as we get more money than we did last year. Economy be damned."
 

Booze Zombie

New member
Dec 8, 2007
7,416
0
0
If people were not morons, they'd be buying all these new IPs instead of buying rehashed crap.
Not to say that sequels are inherently bad, but new IPs can be nice, too.
 

Therumancer

Citation Needed
Nov 28, 2007
9,909
0
0
I think it's too early to say anything. The economy isn't in great shape, and ultimatly we're looking at a long term strategy. It wasn't THAT long ago that we were crticizing EA for not doing anything new. Sure the new strategy hasn't immediatly produce fruit, but I think only a fool would assume it was going to. I still suspect that in the long run EA is going to do better with their current directiont han the old one.

Besides, I honestly don't think EA is losing money to be honest.

The one criticism I'll agree with though is the bit about a "smooth transition to digitally based content". I plan to fight that heavily, and I agree it's not likely to happen within two years. Right now I think discs and used games is the model to follow, and honestly I have yet to see ANYTHING that makes me want to give up those rights and become totally dependant on DLing from a company. With the exception of Valve's periodic sales, I rarely if ever see a digitally downloaded game (brand new) going for LESS than a store bought one despite all of the money allegedly being saved on packaging and such (they just keep that as profit). Even when dealing with lower prices, I see no real guarantee that we aren't dealing with a "Wal Mart" ploy. I mean let's say a service like say STEAM did drive disc based games out of business by say reducing all prices by 90% and keeping them there for 5 years or whatever. In the end, what would be stopping the service from raising prices again once they competition was gone?
 

Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
5,630
0
0
THey are getting a real hammering. Seems like all cannons are against them at the moment.
 

lumenadducere

New member
May 19, 2008
593
0
0
Wasn't the whole reason behind the "new EA" the fact that their old strategy was beginning to no longer work? EA Sports games were no longer selling as well and the bad rap that EA had gotten was beginning to harm sales. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but that's what I had heard. With Activision doing what EA was, they're going to be facing the same issue. Not for another ten years or so, but eventually it's going to catch up with them as well.

I do wish that gamers in general would support lesser-known and riskier IPs, but I get the feeling that the vast majority of people who play games don't pay any attention to gaming news and thus don't know about them. We should be supporting games like Mirror's Edge and Dead Space but instead what sells are formulaic cookie-cutter games. It makes me kind of sad, really.
 

Crunchy English

Victim of a Savage Neck-bearding
Aug 20, 2008
779
0
0
Bah! This guy doesn't know what he's on about. EA will be fine. The closing of Pandemic was likely a mistake, granted, and there's been mistakes made. But MMO's basically print money if you can hook a devoted fanbase, so TOR should be a big deal. And honestly, I'm going to support EA in a way I would have previously thought impossible.

Let's kick up the negative wish fulfillment.

Dear Gaming Deities, O Swift, Terrible, and Sometimes Predictable Winds of the Market,

Please let the following be so.

Please let Modern Warfare 3 fail miserably, just to reassure Activision, and indeed all gaming corporate types, that they have no idea what the hell they're doing and they do need creative artists at the helm.

Please let WoW be shut down due to legal reasons beyond Blizzard's control, there by letting other online communities flourish and freeing thousands of brainless zombies from their technological stasis.

Please let Madden 2011 take a huge risk and plant the NFL license in the middle of a giant action/adventure platformer. Even though they tricked most people into buying with a bland cover, the game will then be a giant financial hit and a critical darling. EA now has permission to do whatever crazy ass thing they want with the genre.
 

hansari

New member
May 31, 2009
1,256
0
0
sgtshock said:
So this Mitch Lasky guy is saying that their financial troubles are the result of their recycled sports games not selling like wildfire like they used to?
I like how people glance rather than read an article.

The failure wasn't in the units sold, thats always been up and down with the Madden series. The failure was that they haven't got a handle on the NFL squeezing more and more money out of them for licensing rights. The failure was that they still haven't turned the franchise into something subscription based and are still focusing on physical media...

theaceplaya said:
I guess public image doesn't count for anything anymore. Sounds like 'We don't care about the growth of the medium, as long as we get more money than we did last year. Economy be damned."
Really? I thought it was more like "Appeasing Gamers is pointless. They demand innovation, but would rather buy a title that offers nothing new."

MW2 probably made more money than all those other ip's mentioned in this article...combined...

Thats sad...and there is no one else to blame but the gaming community.

I played Dead Space and Mirrors Edge...they weren't blockbuster "must haves"...but after playing MW2...can you really say thats a "must have"? At least the EA titles offered something a bit new...
Therumancer said:
Besides, I honestly don't think EA is losing money to be honest.
Yeah, I'm sure their just laying people off and closing studios for shits and giggles.
 

samsonguy920

New member
Mar 24, 2009
2,921
0
0
I doubt Riccitello is going to worry about this guy, considering what Lasky worked on when he was working. Anybody can drag up numbers and call it whatever they want. Mass Effect 2 is going to sell like hotcakes, TOR might start off slow but I'm just about betting that is going to pick up to be a hot number.
Lasky, it's good that you are concerned about the company you worked for, but you should let it go, and focus on your current job. If you have one.
 

Sillyiggy

New member
Jun 12, 2008
55
0
0
"It's not a good week to be leadership at Electronic Arts."

Good thing they will still make tens of millions. That's a lot of 100's to wipe them tears.
 

wasalp

New member
Dec 22, 2008
512
0
0
Therumancer said:
-snip-

The one criticism I'll agree with though is the bit about a "smooth transition to digitally based content". I plan to fight that heavily, and I agree it's not likely to happen within two years. Right now I think discs and used games is the model to follow, and honestly I have yet to see ANYTHING that makes me want to give up those rights and become totally dependant on DLing from a company. With the exception of Valve's periodic sales, I rarely if ever see a digitally downloaded game (brand new) going for LESS than a store bought one despite all of the money allegedly being saved on packaging and such (they just keep that as profit). Even when dealing with lower prices, I see no real guarantee that we aren't dealing with a "Wal Mart" ploy. I mean let's say a service like say STEAM did drive disc based games out of business by say reducing all prices by 90% and keeping them there for 5 years or whatever. In the end, what would be stopping the service from raising prices again once they competition was gone?
Because valve(and steam) isn't run by ass holes.