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Ubisoft ends development at Tom Clancy studio Red Storm

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Why This Matters

Ubisoft's decision to end development at Red Storm Entertainment marks a significant shift for a studio with a storied history in the Tom Clancy franchise and the broader gaming industry. While the studio will remain operational, layoffs and canceled projects highlight ongoing challenges in game development and studio restructuring. The focus on the Snowdrop engine indicates Ubisoft's continued investment in core technology for future titles.

Key Takeaways

Ubisoft is ceasing game development at its studio, Red Storm Entertainment, best known for its work on the Tom Clancy’s series. While the studio is set to remain open, 105 people will be laid off, a Ubisoft source told GamesIndustry.biz .

Those who survive the cull will reportedly continue to work on the Snowdrop engine, used in many of Ubisoft’s tentpole games over the last decade, including Star Wars Outlaws and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora more recently. Red Storm had been working on an untitled Splinter Cell VR game that was canceled in 2022, as well as the also-canceled The Division Heartland.

The studio was co-founded by the author Tom Clancy himself in 1996 (taking its name from Clancy's novel Red Storm Rising), and in its 30 years has worked on a large number of Ghost Recon and Rainbow Six games, among others. It also developed 2023’s broadly well-received Assassin’s Creed Nexus VR.

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