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

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By Paul Tassi
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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.
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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.
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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.
 
I've been hearing this everywhere that Yahtzee was some obnoxiously woke faggot but honestly I used to watch almost every review he put out and I never got that feel from him. Yeah sure, he was a bit of a lib and is probably the type to vote straight Labour, but the only time it ever seemed to leak out in his videos was with an occasional barb here and there, and from what I recall he never participated in any kind of cancelation mobbing. Dude just wanted to make his silly videos and chill.


He's not a raging purple haired twitter bluecheck but he does have an annoying tendency to shoehorn tortuned political references to how much he hates conservatives into his videos like a discount moviebob. And this is not just once in a long while or an oblique reference its regular and in your face. And when he was overseas he the classic Euro inexplicable obsession with lecturing America on its politics. Thinking he's a reasonable center left is like saying the shit I took this morning is better than the shit I took last night. It just goes to show how sad the current state of the left is that we have to pat whoever is not completely insane on the back.
 
I've been hearing this everywhere that Yahtzee was some obnoxiously woke faggot but honestly I used to watch almost every review he put out and I never got that feel from him. Yeah sure, he was a bit of a lib and is probably the type to vote straight Labour, but the only time it ever seemed to leak out in his videos was with an occasional barb here and there, and from what I recall he never participated in any kind of cancelation mobbing. Dude just wanted to make his silly videos and chill.

A lot of the bullshit came in the last few years, and even then it's not unbearable. Except for maybe Hogwarts Legacy.
 
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A lot of the bullshit came in the last few years, and even then it's not unbearable. Except for maybe Hogwarts Legacy.
Yeah I followed him from WAY back and that game was the first time the spergery actually messed up my enjoyment.

Really curious as to the root cause of all this.
 
Side Scrollers interviewed Calandra today
 
Yahtzee is the only game critic with any dignity. Says what he thinks about a game, plays it regardless of any political controversy bullshit or annoying cunts that would screech at him for playing such games, and understands what made Monkey Island good amongst a sea of shit adventure games.
 

Top comment mentions the "legally distinct design."
Still roughly the same, except his avatar looks more like a proper fedora (not a trilby) and he has glasses, and also the background changes colour which feels a bit weird.
As for Second Wind, I respect them doing the Jimquisition thing of being fully independent and encouraging people to donate through Patreon. Already they're already up to $20k/month.
The more interesting question is what's going to happen to the Escapist. The company that bought it last year also bought Destructoid as well. I don't know if they're going to merge them together and close one or if they'll keep it up and just churn out shitty articles that no one reads.
Edit: damn, since posting this their Patreon has already shot up to $28k. Plus I'm assuming they'll do livestreams and shit and people will donate to that shit.
 
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The more interesting question is what's going to happen to the Escapist. The company that bought it last year also bought Destructoid as well. I don't know if they're going to merge them together and close one or if they'll keep it up and just churn out shitty articles that no one reads.
Unironically both will probably get the axe. Both are in the same general band of low headcount, extremely low engagement sites, both pulling in barely 20ish percent of the traffic that a barely hanging on site like Kotaku manages to get. You'd just end up spending a bunch of money on legal fees to merge the brands, remake the contracts of the people you retain, pay out severance to the permanent staff you cut, just to be left with one still defunct site that your investors now expect you to somehow turn around. It'd just be throwing good money after bad.

Meanwhile, if you just axe the entire thing and write down the loss now, you can maybe cash out before the games journalism market bottoms out entirely, and maybe beat your competitors to the punch on whatever the upswing opportunities look like on the other side of that bottom. Its still an L, but at least it looks like a controlled L to recognize when its just game over and take your lumps.
 
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