Summary

Smite 2developerHi-Rez Studioshas laid off its president and several other people in senior management roles in its latest round of cutbacks. The company has faced several workforce challenges over the past year, forcing leadership to make some difficult decisions, and now those decisions have come for leadership themselves. In a break from industry norms,Hi-Rez Studios' most recent layoffs haven’t come for lower-level developers but executives.

Unfortunately, this is not the first workforce reduction theSmite 2team has faced this year. In February,Hi-Rez let go of up to 70 employeesas it slowed ongoing work onPaladinsandRogue Companyto focus onSmite 2. The exact number of employees affected by those layoffs is still unclear, but it was enough to stir up backlash to the point where then-president Stewart Chisam deactivated his Twitter account.

Hi-Rez Studios

Rumors of the most recent layoffs spread around social media before being confirmed by Alex Cantatore, an executive producer at Hi-Rez, in the comments on a Reddit post about the matter. According to Cantatore, the board had determined that there were too many senior managers at the company for its size. Considering howtheSmite 2studio laid off employees in October 2024before doing so again in February 2025, it’s easy to see how the team may have shrunk over the past year. In response, Hi-Rez has let go of Chisam, executive producer Travis Brown, another manager who goes by “Radar,” and “two folks in senior management on the RallyHere side.”

Hi-Rez Studios Lets Go of Five Upper-Level Leaders as Company Shrinks

Cantatore says that the cutbacks don’t represent a change in vision for the company. The team plans to continue focusing onSmite 2, aiming to bring one to two new gods to the game each week, as it has been lately. Earlier this year,Smite 2switched to a seasonal systemto reward players with regularly updated content, and it seems the executive shake-up won’t affect that going forward. The player experience should remain largely unchanged, as Cantatore assured that the layoffs don’t impact anyone else directly working on the game or their mission statement.

WhileSmite 2fans may be able to breathe easy about the future of the game, the layoffs continue an unfortunately persistent trend in the gaming industry. Recently,Bulletstormstudio People Can Fly announced layoffsof its own. Microsoft, Playtonic, Codemasters, and Respawn Entertainment have all faced staff cutbacks this year, too. It’s a tough industry to survive in, and not even the executive suite is safe, as this news from Hi-Rez shows.