Zero Punctuation Ends As ‘The Escapist’ Faces Mass Resignations After EIC Firing

(Link) (Archive)
By Paul Tassi
drown bitch.png
When people ask me how to get into games journalism these days, my main piece of advice is “don’t.” I’m really not kidding, as while I am privileged to be where I am, it’s an almost impossible path to walk given the state of the industry and the instability found within.

Case in point, a wild scene unfolded last night as long-time gaming site The Escapist fired some of its team members, including EIC Nick Calandra, for reportedly not meeting goals set by its parent company Gamurs.
muh goals.png
(Link) (Archive)
After Calandra was fired, Escapist staff members, contributors and producers all took to Twitter to announce they were also leaving the site, with many of them indicating they would be working on some new project with Calandra directly.

The departures and firings essentially cleaned out the entirety of The Escapist’s video department, including most significantly at all, the departure of Yahtzee Croshaw, the voice of Zero Punctuation, one of the oldest and most famous game criticism video series, and one I grew up watching long before I started doing this for a living. Croshaw resigned, but he does not own the rights to Zero Punctuation itself, so whatever he does next, it will be without that branding. Though it’s obvious the branding can’t survive without him, even if The Escapist retains it.
muh goals 2.png
(Link) (Archive)
By all accounts Calandra was a great EIC, and clearly inspired a lot of loyalty in those working for him, given the events of last night. Gamurs feels like yet another company trying to squeeze blood from a stone with likely unreasonable growth targets in an industry where large increases are more or less impossible. Their video section pivoted from native video to mostly YouTube, which can gain more views but produce less revenue, but clearly the entire endeavor ended up backfiring, and now The Escapist does not have a video department at all, it seems.

As of this morning, The Escapist is still publishing new articles, as the site hasn’t lost all its writers or contributors. It remains unclear what level of staff or freelancers remain at the company, and what plans may be to rehire for a new video section. But it’s safe to say that without the old team or an icon like Yahtzee, it might just be over altogether.

As for Calandra and his new project, that’s certainly the more interesting endeavor, as that team has a lot of fans and hopefully they can put something together that works for them and their audience without dealing with corporate neck-breathing. More on that as details emerge. I’ve reached out to Gamurs for comment and will update if I hear back.
 
End of an era. Yahtzee might've gotten a taste of Californication in his time living on the West Coast, but I can't deny that he was a unique brand of healthy- if edgy in the early days- cynicism with game reviews.

Wherever he goes now, I can only hope he'll be able to loosen the progressive restraint a little more and go back to his old format to even a little degree. It'd be refreshing to see. Although another part of me would be fine if he just focuses on his wife and kid(s?) with his future endeavors.
 
Sucks that they go out like this, in recent times the Escapist tried to turn their ship around (at least from what I've seen on their Youtube front), but at the end of the day if most of them end up working under that EIC they might be able to put together something without the corporate bullshit.


None of this would have happened if they still had Moviebob around though.
 
Sucks that they go out like this, in recent times the Escapist tried to turn their ship around (at least from what I've seen on their Youtube front), but at the end of the day if most of them end up working under that EIC they might be able to put together something without the corporate bullshit.


None of this would have happened if they still had Moviebob around though.
BIG PICTURE: Moviebob dresses like a ninja and cuts down gamergaters who insult women online.
 
This is pretty interesting. There's a lot of history to the Escapist. They had all these people like Yahtzee and Jim Sterling and Moviebob, and it seems that they reached a nadir around the mid 2010s after people like Jim Sterling left and it seemed like there was a bad aura around them. It's worth noting that until 2018, they were owned by Defy Media, who were embroiled in a lot of controversy and eventually went bankrupt that year. It was around that time they started a rebrand, they updated their really outdated website, rehired people like Moviebob and brought some new people into the fold like Jack Packard, and I guess try and make it so they weren't just defined solely by Zero Punctuation. So it's interesting to hear that the company who got control of Escapist would have similar problems running it. But it seems especially weird because before I guess, it seemed like Zero Punctuation was just this isolated thing on the website. Yahtzee did his own thing, they paid him well because they knew he was the money maker, and I doubt he felt much incentive to jump ship when people like Sterling and Moviebob left. But this revival they've undertaken in the last five years seems to have been pretty successful, and Yahtzee regularly collaborates with Nick, Marty, Jack Packard, etc. and they've all met up in person to where they're probably a very close knit group that when one of them goes, the rest will follow suit.
It's also interesting to note that they changed up their formula in recent months. It used to be they'd release new ZP episodes on the Escapist website and then YouTube a week later. Now they have an early access thing for YouTube members, and because he swears a lot they've started censoring the ZPs for everyone who isn't a member. They've also started running sponsors on their videos. So it makes me think they're on the verge of bankruptcy and despite all their attempts, they fired Nick Calendra because it still managed to not being enough.
If Escapist isn't dead in the next two years, it will most certainly be downsized to the point of complete and total irrelevancy.
 
Escapist is dead... Meanwhile I log back in to my 17 year old Newgrounds account and find the site to be the opposite of dead. What a time to be not dead.
That's because Newgrounds is one of the very very very few places left on the internet you can post edgy shit and not get banned with some snotty message by a tranny janny.
 
The most shocking thing was that he signed over the rights to Zero Punctuation.
He'd only made two reviews, as just some guy living in shared housing in Australia, back in 2008 before he was then hired. It's likely that they acquired the rights when they hired him which would mean that he's basically never had them for almost the entirity of the show.
 
The Escapist died when "The Girl Who Sings About Videogames" stopped singing about videogames. Aside from Yahtzee jerking himself off on the front page and that screw attack faggot, I'm surprised it's still around. It's all a cesspool and this last decade has shown the world, nobody really plays videogames anymore. It's just using the medium to espouse your shit opinions as fact and calling everyone elses' shit opinions fiction.
 
I doubt he felt much incentive to jump ship when people like Sterling and Moviebob left.
Well Sterling, Bob, and the most pseudo of pseudo intellectuals extra credits all fucked off when they were told to stop having full on reeing fits about gamergate and get back to taking about what they're paid to. Which was apparently the ultimate insult.

Yhatzee never needed telling because he both stuck to his job in ZP and despite being buddies with the other ripped the sjw lot apart multiple times on his podcast thing that he did outside of the escapist.
 
He'd only made two reviews, as just some guy living in shared housing in Australia, back in 2008 before he was then hired. It's likely that they acquired the rights when they hired him which would mean that he's basically never had them for almost the entirity of the show.
Yahtzee also said he enjoyed the safety of a paycheck as one of the reasons not to leave ZP during all these years, even when everyone was jumping ship, which makes me wonder what made change his mind.

I enjoyed the cold take vids too, by that toher guy that isn't Yahtzee
 
  • Like
Reactions: Koby_Fish
Back