Blizzard Entertainment reviews

3.6

64% would recommend to a friend

(1,433 total reviews)
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Johanna Faries

70% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Blizzard Entertainment has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 1,433 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Blizzard Entertainment employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Mídia e comunicação industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
3.0
Aug 8, 2012
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

-Generally fun place to work, or at least a fun place to claim to work. -Pay was decent by my standards, I was throwing away excess cash left and right and still had more to spare. -It's a positive "work experience" on a resume, though I have yet to benefit from that. -Free WoW -Above average benefits packages -At least HR goes through the motions of providing access to resources. -Morhaime is a saint, get him in your corner if you can. - No drug screen or random testing

Cons

-Training is short and virtually pointless. They'd almost be better off just throwing people in without it. And their "on-going training" is a joke, it's like a pep rally. They teach you things that barely apply out on the floor, it's a waste of time. They could save oodles on lost productivity by stopping these failed ventures. -Their practices of hiring temps borders on the unethical. While I was there, the on-site temp hiring manager was discovered to be discriminating against perceived undesirable new hires and setting them up for failure. He was specifically doing things like forging attendance records to get people fired. "Wet Blanket Steve," thankfully, lost his position due to this coming to light, but it still took like 2 years before that happened. -Ever-changing and conflicting expectations and policies contribute to a labyrinthine work environment - expect to get lost and left in the dark. I couldn't speak with my managers about real issues for fear of reprimand, suspicion or getting ignored. -I think I met the HR lady twice; once at hiring, and once for filling out 401k stuff. -You're never good enough to promote; you literally have to be top dog, volunteer for 60 hour weeks, and kiss every ass over your head. 99% of Blizzard employees are destined to become former employees one way or another. The 1% that's left gets fat, overpaid, and arrogant. -The typical corporate attitude of money before people permeates this company to the core. They laid off in late Febuary. It's early August and they're hiring temps again... and apparently they have a problem with rehiring ex-employees. -You're strongly encouraged to shut up and do your job. Doing anything to better yourself or your environment detracts from your productivity, making you look bad. This even makes kissing ass a risky endeavor. -There's definitely more than a few bad apples in mid and upper management. Firing people for minor offenses makes them look good. When Seniors Game Masters get promoted to Lead Game Masters they tend to go two-faced. The longer they're there, the longer they will stay, and the more corrupt they get. I'd say 4/5 Lead Game Masters end up leaving the company for better opportunities and to escape the toxic environment. While the main supervisor I had for the majority of my time there was great and at least half the Senior Game Masters were amazing, everyone else sucked and was sour and disrespectful. -The customers and management make the work toxic. Long exposure will eventually break your morale and get you fired. You'd think Blizz would support their employees on this front, but the sad truths of capitalism's backwardness prevail. -There's a lot of cronyism within the management. During my time there there was an influx of ex-Dell hotshots among others cycling in, hiring each other, tag teaming through positions, using all their corporate experience to iron post-merger Blizz flat and soulless. It all looks good on paper, but when dude comes in for 6 months to give the company a patented corporate facelift and then runs off with a cool couple million $ in stocks and upper management pay, it makes you wonder what the world is coming to.

1.0
Jun 2, 2023

Fall from Grace

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

There are still talented developers working at Blizzard, despite the losses.

Cons

The upper management has open disdain for their employees. They pay low for the area, most people have difficulty living within an hour of the office. Heavy workloads because of the loss of employees and the inability to hire. They have gone from the best company I ever worked for, to the worst. A majority of the employees are hoping the acquisition goes through and that they fire Bobby Kotick, Mike Ybarra, and their ilk.

1.0
Dec 12, 2021

Just using the Blizzard Name

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

=If you like your pay and you're on a game team, it's reliable long-term employment =Great selection of games to work on

Cons

=Great exodus of employees from 2014-2021 due to bad pay and profit-sharing and lack of game releases, leaving few original people responsible for your favorite Blizzard games left. This was especially the case with 2021. =Worst pay in the industry. It took me 8 years to have the same base salary that I got as my first job offer out of college from another company. People who quit regularly received 30-100% raises especially if your job type is located everywhere in the tech or game industry. People even quit and came back for big raises because they do not give people decent raises. They only give money to new hires. They take advantage of people who love Blizzard games by paying them nothing and then have an endless line of next chumps waiting to replace them. They then started to use interns, contract workers, and temps to further cut costs. =No major games shipped since 2016, reducing profit sharing to little to nothing. =All games are doing more and more poorly each year with 2012 the highpoint of the company and downwards since then. =Leadership started outright lying in company emails to employees =Company values employees ZERO. They don't care if you come or go and replace people on a dime and forget the previous people existed the next day with zero remorse. They even regularly joke about people who left moments later. Cutthroat Island. You'll get more respect and love from your local fast-food job. (and I have) . You are just a number to them. This was never the case until the last 6 years. Your friends value you, the company does not. =HR never helps you with anything and works actively against you on the company's behalf (HR is PR for the company) =Environment as of 2021 is the most toxic you could possibly imagine even outside of the reported news, just in general coworker interactions. People are not working together toward a common goal because they're spending their whole time fighting against each other which is obvious in the state of the products. =Once the co-founders Mike Morhaime/Frank Pearce left, the company was completely taken over by Activision =All of the perks of working there were removed, even pre-covid due to cost restrictions or the company running out of money (except at leadership levels). Another company that offers a company picnic is a step up in perks. =Has no problem hiring people but can't take care of the employees once they get there via pay, perks, promotions =If you work globally, prepare for your international office to be shut down with zero remorse or even a thanks email. =Hired people remotely for two years but wouldn't let people work remotely if they wanted to leave the area. =Cost of living is well beyond imagination and the raises and pay do not make up for it. In most years, the raises are the same or below inflation. This has never been addressed since 1991. =Company won't move or let people move to lower-cost areas like their Texas Office. They insist on one of the highest cost of living areas in the country outside of San Francisco.

Viewing 103 - 105 of 1,433 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,670 Blizzard Entertainment reviews submitted anonymously by Blizzard Entertainment employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Blizzard Entertainment is right for you.