As if the gaming industry wasn’t going through enough already, one of the studios behind the belovedLife Is Strangeseries, Deck Nine Games, issued today’s latest round of layoffs. The studio’s announcement was issued on the heels of others today, like PlayStation, and yesterday with developer Supermassive.

According to an announcement from Deck Nine Games’ official Twitter, 20 percent of their staff were let go due to the “worsening market conditions.” This isn’t the first time the studio has gone through something like this, either. In 2023,Deck Nine laid off 30 employees, with others still at the company reporting some team leads at the studio offered up their own jobs to save other staff.

Chloe Price in Life Is Strange

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Deck Nine Games’ Game Director, Stephan Frost, explained on Twitter that “leadership took paycuts” in an effort to avoid as many layoffs as possible. But, despite the team’s strong foundation, it wasn’t enough to reduce it entirely.

The ghost at the end of the hallway

The impacted team members were responsible for the follow-up titles toLife Is Strange, likeBefore the StormandTrue Colors, and the latest addition of TellTale’sThe Expanse. More recently, Deck Nine revisited the original game, branching off with a remastered collection recapping the heart-wrenching tales that first began with Max and Chloe. Unfortunately, the studio’s history of producing emotional, personal journies shared with millions alongside the legacy of LIS creators, Dontnod, did not protect workers in a time of rampant, industry-wide layoffs.

Deck Nine had a layoff today. Leadership took paycuts to keep the number down as much as possible. This is the strongest team D9 has ever been and it absolutely sucks that the industry is in the state that it is presently.

Picking up the smiley face post-it off the broken mirror

Sony has also announced another surge oflayoffs today, cutting over 900 employees across PlayStation. Combined with this and Deck Nine Games’ recent events, 2024 is definitely off to a bad start, including the cutbacks made with Activision Blizzard and Xbox.

It isn’t quite clear what the future holds for Deck Nine Games and the people remaining at companies impacted, but hopefully, there’s still a light at the end of the tunnel.

John and Molly sitting on the park bench

Close up shot of Marissa Marcel starring in Ambrosio

Kukrushka sitting in a meadow

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Overseer looking over the balcony in opening cutscene of Funeralopolis

Edited image of Super Imposter looking through window in No I’m not a Human demo cutscene with thin man and FEMA inside the house

Looking at the ghost of Jackie inside the lighthouse