Another good lesson about why we should trust only FOSS ecosystems

210 points

Unity employee here, idk anything specific about the departments that handle this I wouldn’t even know what their name is. With that caveat, I will say that all the layoffs last year going into this year, changing CEOs, and the competition between big company beurocracy and the dying breath of small company culture, a lot of departments are behaving erratically. I wouldn’t be surprised if nobody internally has a clear answer why this was banned but others aren’t. Some workers may legit be trying to help but their hands are tied for corporate or maybe even legal reasons, it could be people trying to keep their heads down and close tickets quickly to keep metrics up in the hopes they’re less likely to be fired. I think you all know this already but please don’t be too hard on the workers we’re doing what we can but it’s a corporate mess right now

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83 points
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Look, it’s a low level employee of a faceless corporation!

GET 'IM!

Jokes aside, thanks for the transparency, and salute to you and your coworkers for trying to weather the storm caused by “shifting paradigms”… that’s what they call it, right? I know the execs can shift my paradigm, that’s for sure.

Peace and love.

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12 points

Tech in general but especially the game industry desperately needs to unionize. If the last couple years doesn’t convince tech bros they’re just as expendable as all the other working class out there, idk what will. Got to do something to insulate us from “restructures”, “rightsizing”, and “company resets”

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31 points

I feel like more than anything right now, you need a hug. 🤗

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7 points

I appreciate you

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17 points

Wow I never knew it was that bad. I hope you have something else lined up it sounds like everyone’s employment is shaky

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16 points

Yeah it’s a bit of a shit show for sure. Unfortunately I do not have anything else lined up right now, I know that’s an unsafe decision. My life has been a mess lately I can only handle so much at once and finding different work is exhausting

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4 points

If you’re a software engineer, and you’re in the unity Austin area, lmk. Assuming you would be open to writing b2b software, the company i work for is huge, and still hiring devs.

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4 points

I can understand that. I wish you the best

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3 points

A friend of mine worked in a position I would have assumed was considered vital to one of Unity’s products, in fact to my knowledge they were the only one keeping that part running. Apparently the higher-ups were able to lay them off without much hesitation this time around. The company seems to be leaking hard.

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8 points

As a long time Unity user, thanks for your hard work. It’s appreciated more than you could ever know.

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1 point

Can you prove that unity’s employee?

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-37 points

Stop making excuses for your fuck ups and start fix things.

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23 points

Amazing lol. Yeah I’ll get right on that maybe I can talk some sense into the CEO during my daily morning cocktails with him

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3 points

THAT’S BETTER GOSH

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15 points
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It’s not his fault that his bosses and their bosses are fuckwits. Don’t blame the common worker for the shit the company board does

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6 points

Written by someone who has never beena cog in the machine at a company like this.

There’s nothing he can do to affect things there. Nothing. Not even quitting will change anything.

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3 points

Quitting would probably be doing them a favor tbh they’re already trying to fire everyone

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2 points
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You don’t understand how development works, at all. The developers themselves don’t make these kind of decisions at these companies. They just do what they are told to do by their higher-ups. The higher-ups happen to be corporate businesspeople that don’t really know much about tech, and only care about profits.

The blame for Unity’s failures belongs to the executives and businesspeople, not the developers.

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126 points

Really though, what were they thinking. Why would anyone risk staying with unity after all their bad decisions, especially when they clearly have no intention to stop being dumb.

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74 points

I went to a game dev meetup in Seoul last year. Everyone was using Unity.

I went again last month. Half the people were using Godot.


For a bit more context, I used to work in the gaming industry. We used Unity because it was great for making money - drop in ads and tracking, you’re good to go. The Godot ecosystem isn’t as mature for that yet. However, even we were considering switching to Godot. It wasn’t worth switching for a number of reasons (besides the above mentioned ones, Godot is also “laggier” and we have some heavier games), but had we started shop yesterday, it’s safe to say we would have used Godot too.

Unity just laid off 25% of their workforce. That is not a small number. Their days are numbered.

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26 points

Small correction they haven’t fired 25% of us yet, it is a work in progress

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5 points

Good luck. It’s a stressful time. I hope you get yourself sorted in whatever you plan to do.

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15 points
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Yep, I started my own game dev journey a year ago after a decade in the tech industry.

My gamer friends: Use Unity Bro its so easy to learn!

Hrm but uh what about cost structure, licensing, all that kind of stuff?

Doesnt matter bro, you can just port it all if it doesnt work!

Well uh, porting is actually a lot of work and burnout is a serious concern so wouldnt it make more sense to-

Youre making this too complicated, what you need to do first is-

And that conversation was obviously useless.

Anyway yeah, I picked Godot after doing, you know actual research on all the benefits and limitations of various engines.

See, Godot, being open source, and myself, not having a huge amount of money to throw at this, and also not just knowing any reasonable or reliable people that could contribute… I can afford to work with Godot at a comfortable pace and not be driven insane by budgetary concerns and a timetable, and Godot is likely to only improve, and I can improve with it, expand the scope or add new features as they become better supported by engine updates or freely usable nifty tools and techniques proliferate.

Also at this point I am planning on really only supporting linux users, as I am again looking to do this as a hobbyist that isnt really concerned about making a ton of money, and also at this point I just literally despise every technically incompetent person non FOSS user I have ever known, so Godot suits that well.

Oh and linux gaming marketshare is growing rather rapidly.

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14 points
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I just literally despise every technically incompetent person

Those are strong words for people that just didn’t dedicate 90% of their lives to tech like we did. Some people actually do have other interests you know.

Is it okay to hate you simply for not knowing what a flyback diode, colpitts oscillator, phase-locked loop, or regenerative receiver is? That’s my hobby. And there are not as many of us as there are software devs. There are not many here who I can discuss electronics engineering with. But I don’t despise people because of that.

You gotta realize, WE are the weirdos, not them. A very high interest and obsession over tech is not an average human quality.

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7 points

Godot, being open source

This is the key thing IMO. If they ever do anything like try to make it a paid framework with huge fees, or just move in a direction the community disagrees with, the existing open source code remains open source and someone can just fork it.

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4 points

I’ve told this story countless times, but I think it’s the perfect example of why I’ll always choose Godot given the chance.

Do you know when you’re playing a single-player game and you have to switch controllers and now your new controller doesn’t work? Or when the menu can only be navigated by Player 1? Well that happens because the game is only looking at input for the first controller. Story time, a few years back I was playing around with making a single-player game, I tried Unity and Godot, both suffered from this, you had to duplicate the input for any controller you wanted to make sure worked for all of them. So I took a look at Godot’s code, and in a couple of hours I had an “all controllers” option in the combo box to select which control to get input. I opened a PR, maintainers thought it was a neat feature, and now everyone can use this, and afaik Unity still suffers from this and there are dozens of assets on the store that try to fix it in different ways.

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-2 points

It’s 25% of their swelled up post COVID workforce it’s not that bad.

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12 points

x * 1.25 = 1.25x

1.25x - (1.25x * 0.25) = 0.9375x

(I know you’re memeing, but growing 25% then cutting 25% is actually a significant net-cut)

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6 points

You tell those people who left good jobs and now need this to put food on their table and pay the bills. You have the empathy of a CEO.

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71 points

They’re mostly banking on the cost of change being higher than the inconvenience of staying.

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30 points

They probably are, but it’s not really about cost, it’s about fear. I fear that while it costs $x to switch to Unreal Enigne now, it’ll cost $x+10 after a few weeks when they do their next decision, and $x+20 a month or so after that.

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14 points

Like buying a reverse lottery ticket. If you’re unlucky, you suddenly have to pay a big amount somewhere in the future.

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4 points

Also I think there’s a vast majority of crap in app purchase games that will happily pay money to unity as they run their gacha systems. Real, honest developers care about stuff like this, but international game farms (the kind that always seem to be sponsoring YouTubers and streamers) are just running calculations on what it will cost them to keep using Unity.

And now that unity has backed down on pricing those devs are still raking in money, so they, as potentially unity’s biggest customers, and unity themselves, don’t care what more indie devs think as they push forward higher growth targets.

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13 points

Which signals to investors that there is little to no expected growth. If you aren’t attracting new customers to grow your user base, then you only have the option to milk your existing customers to increase revenue.

That may work short term, but long term it signals a death knell for the company, since as the old customers retire or the studios close down, the new crop of game developers would have been trained on or adopted a different engine so aren’t going to switch to Unity. Eventually they just run out of customers.

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7 points

Especially in a competitive market where compelling alternatives exist.

Especially in tech.

And especially in software.

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5 points

That may work short term

That’s all that matters. The next quarter’s growth is more important than the year-end P/L sheets.

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11 points

ah the mainframe strategy

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10 points

The microsoft strategy.

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2 points

I moonlight as a small app developer. This is absolutely correct. I have a handful of legacy apps which uses Unity, and makes so little that moving them would cost more.

That said, if/when I do another project, it won’t be in Unity.

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23 points
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edit: The following is off topic, but I’ll.leave it as a testament to my gray-beardedness. In my defense: Unity isn’t Unity anymore. Don’t get old.

I’ve been using Linux for 30 years now, and for a while I was an advocate for Ubuntu and Canonical (among others, I’m pan-distributive). Then things changed: GNOME 3, Wayland, Unity, something-sonething, Snaps… All too much.

As an advocate, I’m apt not to emerge with favorites, or to yuck others’ yums. Neverthekess, Canonical is a press beyond the pale, many days.

In the end, I don’t recommend Canonical distros. LMDE is solid, as are most of the *bian and redhat downstreams. I don’t recommend the others because I don’t know them, but more importantly I couldn’t help a friend un-bodge a bad installer on them (likewise for "BSD or Darwin).

But really, no love for Canonical. They went to some Dark Side, and I’ll have a hard time forgiving them for it.

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22 points

I also thought of Unity the DE before reading the article

I understand the confusion. This doesn’t belong to a Linux community. I mean, I see the relation with FOSS but I’m sure there are FOSS communities out there. The article doesn’t even mentions Linux, just Windows and Android.

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11 points

You do realize this is about the Unity game engine, right?

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10 points

I do now. See edits upthread.

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3 points

This is about the Unity game engine, not the unrelated Unity desktop shell from Canonical.

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5 points

Well said nevertheless. Both suck.

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2 points

Yes understood. See edts up thread

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2 points

With ibm working hard to enshittify redhat even faster than newredhat themselves, we should consider avoiding them as a first-class porting and work target.

Look at OpenEL as a successor to the RH and an upstream for the other ELs once RH starts eating from that tasty “free stuff they can sell” trough. Having made bank on TheForeMan without actually making an effort to support it, they have a model they can use for everything.

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1 point
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121 points

The VLC team are heroes. Three cheers.

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25 points

This headline was the subtle push I needed to donate to Videolan. What an amazing project, we’re lucky to have it.

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88 points

At this point you should know that unity is an evil company.

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31 points
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It was literally led by the evil EA guy.

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19 points

Was led. He left after the license fee catastrophe.

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9 points
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But the interim CEO led the redundancies. The common factor in all of this is the board. The CEO just does what the board are pushing for and sign off on. Ricky is bad and not a good man by any stretch of the imagination, but he was less bad 2/4/6 years ago for a bit. He’s just the hatchet (yes) man doing the business of the big shareholders.

The next CEO will likely be following the same play book. Without a change of board, it’s still an evil company. Ricky was just the fall guy that they bin off so naive folk buy into the fact it’s “all fixed, and back to old Unity”.

The great advise right now, is stay away from Unity. You have Godot, Armory3d, and hell, even Epic run Unreal Engine is better.

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9 points

Wait he already left?

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1 point
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48 points

What a horrible way to handle this. A bit like YouTube demonetization policies.

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7 points

Only in the licensing space in particular there is really no good reason to hide the exact rules what is acceptable and what isn’t. Nobody is going to circumvent your defences if they know exactly which licenses you allow.

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