Quantic Dream points assertion on poisonous office court docket case

In 2018, French press shops Canard PC, Le Monde, and Mediapart revealed articles in regards to the work tradition of Quantic Dream—the studio chargeable for video games like Fahrenheit, Past: Two Souls, Detroit: Grow to be Human, and Heavy Rain. Based on Canard PC’s investigation (hyperlink comprises NSFW photographs), Quantic Dream workers had been topic to a “lengthy crunch sample” on every sport, and one supervisor created and shared “600 photomontages of doubtful style” that includes the faces of employees edited into the our bodies of others, together with porn stars and a Nazi—harassment that led to the departure of your entire IT division and a court docket case being introduced in opposition to the studio.
After years of rulings and appeals, on April 7 the Paris Courtroom of Appeals issued a choice in Quantic Dream’s favor. Quantic Dream revealed an announcement declaring this ultimate proof of “The absence of a ‘poisonous ambiance’ or any sort of discrimination within the studio”, and that this was backed up by statements made by Workers Representatives. It additionally declared that there had been “quite a few inspections by authorities providers lately”, which did not discover “irregularities within the administration of the corporate and/or its contracts”.
The assertion additionally claims the testimonies of workers and ex-employees who denied the accusations “had been violently attacked by individuals appearing below false identities” as a part of an organized marketing campaign. “Greater than 10,000 tweets had been despatched in a couple of days by a single account on Twitter, with the purpose of getting the allegations in opposition to the corporate to the highest of the various search engines. There’s proof {that a} very small variety of individuals are behind these actions, that are geared toward intentionally tarnishing the studio’s picture and damaging its crew.”
French union Solidaires Informatique not too long ago issued a press launch of its personal addressing statements made by Quantic Dream founder David Cage in an interview with IGN. Discussing the opening of a brand new department primarily based in Montreal, Cage declared, “all allegations about our studio have been indisputably confirmed improper”, which Solidaires Informatique disputed, describing it as a part of an effort by Quantic Dream “to get its public picture below management” and a sample of “silencing all dissident voices.”