
Electronic Arts lays off hundreds of workers in latest round of cuts
Electronic Arts, the global video game company, is slashing its workforce again.
The company, based in Redwood City, Calif., has eliminated several hundred positions, including about 100 jobs at Respawn, a video game development studio based in Los Angeles.
'As part of our continued focus on our long-term strategic priorities, we've made select changes within our organization that more effectively aligns teams and allocates resources in service of driving future growth,' said Justin Higgs, a spokesman for Electronic Arts, in a statement.
The company, which has a large office in Marina del Rey, is helping employees explore new roles internally and providing support to affected workers, he added.
Bloomberg first reported the cuts, saying they affected between 300 and 400 people, citing a person familiar with the cuts.
The layoffs are the latest to hit Electronic Arts, which had about 13,700 employees as of March 2024.
The company in 2024 said it would cut about 5% of its workforce after announcing a similar cut a year earlier.
Electronic Arts has offices in California but also has workers across Europe and Asia. Respawn, the studio behind popular games 'Apex Legends' and 'Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order,' has a big presence in Los Angeles but also opened studios in Canada and Wisconsin.
Respawn canceled the development of a 'Titanfall' game that wasn't close to being released, Bloomberg reported. The Titanfall franchise includes a series of first-person shooter games.
The company said in a statement this week on social media that it 'made the decision to step away from two early-stage incubation projects and make some targeted team adjustments across Apex Legends and Star Wars Jedi.'
'These decisions are not easy, and we are deeply grateful to every teammate affected,' Respawn said in the statement.
___
© 2025 Los Angeles Times.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
29 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
The Tech Incubator at the Heart of the New Museum's Museum Expansion
Hello and welcome to Bloomberg's weekly design digest. I'm Kriston Capps, staff writer for Bloomberg CityLab and your guide to the world of architecture and the people who build things. This week WHY Architecture's Michael C. Rockefeller Wing reopens at the Met. Sign up to keep up: Subscribe to get the Design Edition newsletter every Sunday.


Bloomberg
33 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Delta Sees Demand Ticking Up After ‘Lumpy' First Months
Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian is more confident about demand in the second half of the year due to price-sensitive passengers in the US showing restraint in recent months amid a worsening economic climate. Demand should 'tick up a bit' in the period, Bastian said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in New Delhi on Sunday. That's after Delta suffered weakness in bookings predominantly in the US market and among leisure travelers in its main cabin earlier this year, he said in an interview with Bloomberg's Guy Johnson. (Source: Bloomberg)


Washington Post
42 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Washington didn't wreck DOGE. Elon Musk did.
As Elon Musk departs Washington, his mood resembles his Cybertruck: ugly and adolescent. First, during an interview at the Qatar Economic Forum, when pressed about his anemic results at budget-cutting, Musk told his interviewer, Bloomberg's Mishal Husain, that she sounded like an 'NPC' (a non-player character in a video game) who was 'trapped in the dialogue tree of a conventional journalist.'