Difference between revisions of "Robert Kotick"

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Kotick has been covered extensively in the press. The articles vary greatly in their focus and approval, ranging from fluffing praise from Forbes[http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/0202/052.html], to demonic-hatred from Ars Technica[http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2009/01/activisions-bobby-kotick-brings-cash-but-not-heart.ars].
 
Kotick has been covered extensively in the press. The articles vary greatly in their focus and approval, ranging from fluffing praise from Forbes[http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/0202/052.html], to demonic-hatred from Ars Technica[http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2009/01/activisions-bobby-kotick-brings-cash-but-not-heart.ars].
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Revision as of 16:46, 17 June 2010

Robert Kotick.

Robert Kotick is the CEO, president, and board member for Activision Blizzard, a position he assumed after the Activision Blizzard merger in July 2008. Prior to that Kotick had been the CEO of Activision since February 1991.

Kotick is a businessman first and a gamer second (if at all) and has a notorious reputation (that he works to enhance) as being focused exclusively on the bottom line. There were concerns in the gaming community when Activision bought/merged with Blizzard, since Kotick's oft-stated business philosophies seemed to be in direct contradiction to Blizzard's slow, careful, quality-first design practices.

Blizzard's heads assured fans that there would be no management changes at Blizzard and no influence or interference from Activision leadership, and so far there's been no evidence that this is not true. Fans remain concerned though, since for all the grumbling heard about Blizzard's slow development pace and frequent delays, the prospect of them rushing games and sacrificing quality to meet corporate timelines is a much scarier proposition.


A Bottom Line Type of Guy

The follow is quoted from Kotick's wikipedia page:

Kotick is a controversial figure in the press and gaming community. This is partially due to a perception that he is only interested in creating sequels to popular franchises, rather than developing new ones. [1] In responding to why Activision Blizzard chose not to publish certain games, he implied the company is not interested in games that "don't have the potential to be exploited every year on every platform with clear sequel potential and have the potential to become $100 million franchises". [2]
Some members of the press openly criticize Kotick. Ars Technica editor Ben Kuchera wrote, "Kotick doesn't play his games, and it shows."[3]
Kotick threatened to pull support from Sony's Playstation 3 console if the company didn't lower its price. Kotick also created a stir when commenting on the financial success of the Call of Duty, Guitar Hero, and World of Warcraft franchises. Following news that the Modern Warfare 2 Prestige Edition will cost $149.99, the Tony Hawk: Ride bundle will cost $119.99 and DJ Hero will cost $119.99, Kotick stated to a reporter, "if it was left to me, I would raise the prices even further." [4]


Resources

Kotick has been covered extensively in the press. The articles vary greatly in their focus and approval, ranging from fluffing praise from Forbes[5], to demonic-hatred from Ars Technica[6].