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Sixty-one unionized workers from Ubisoft’s Halifax studio have voted overwhelmingly to accept a confidential settlement after the Paris-based publisher closed the site in January.
The affected employees — part of CWA Canada Local 30111 — were among 71 staff at the mobile-focused studio, which had recently voted to unionize and was working on projects tied to the Assassin’s Creed franchise.
Ubisoft said the shutdown was part of wider “cost-optimization” and denied it was a response to unionization.
CWA Canada president Carmel Smyth said negotiations were hard-fought but that Ubisoft acted in good faith.
Halifax was slated to be Ubisoft’s first unionized studio in North America.
The closure followed a company-wide restructuring into five “Creative Houses,” a return-to-office mandate and further cost cuts, even after the firm secured a €1.16 billion investment from Tencent last November and announced plans to reduce fixed costs by a further €200 million.







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