On Wednesday, a California State agency filed a lawsuit against the game publisher Activision Blizzard over allegations of rampant sexual discrimination and sexual harassment. The nature of this harassment is so widespread, the lawsuit says, that women who have worked for the game maker “almost universally confirmed that working for Defendants was akin to working in a frat house”—which, according to this lawsuit, means a workplace full of inebriated men who sexually harassed their female colleagues without being punished for it.
The 29-page lawsuit claims that across the entire corporation, pay disparity led to women receiving “less total compensation than their male counterparts while performing substantially similar work.” It includes multiple alleged examples of Activision Blizzard slowing promotions for women in favor of male counterparts, even when those women had longer tenures and a superior review record at the company, and added that women of color were “particularly targets of Defendants’ discriminatory practices.”
A direct report to Blizzard’s president
The full lawsuit includes a lengthy list of violations of both sexual discrimination and sexual harassment statutes, including many that single out unnamed Activision Blizzard staffers, and they range from explicit to repugnant. The lawsuit describes one particularly extreme example of alleged harassment—and says the sufferer eventually took her own life.
Multiple company executives are mentioned by name in the filing. Blizzard Entertainment President J. Allen Brack allegedly received a direct report from an employee in “early 2019” that staffers were quitting the company over “sexual harassment and sexism.” The report pointed directly to the company’s battle.net online service team, where “women who were not ‘huge gamers’ or ‘core gamers’ and not into the party scene were excluded and treated like outsiders.”
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