Ubisoft's share price plummets following internal restructure announcement, pivot to heavier use of AI — Developer falls below $1 billion EUR market cap amidst game cancellations and layoffs
It was once valued at over $11 billion.
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Ubisoft's future remains uncertain as the company gears for internal restructuring that will eventually save it around 500 million Euros in operational costs. The developer has suffered through financial woes for the past few years, cancelling six games today — four of which weren't even announced yet — along with enacting layoffs. The news has caused Ubisoft's market cap to fall below 1 billion Euros for the first time since 2012, with trading of shares briefly suspended on Thursday morning, AFP reports.
Out of those six titles that Ubisoft put to rest, one was the Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time remake, a highly-anticipated reimagining of a 2000s classic. The game was originally unveiled back in 2020 but has been stuck in development hell ever since, having even changed production studios twice. Sands of Time has now become the poster boy for Ubisoft's instability in an industry it once dominated.
Current industry citations say the French developer will report an operating loss of $1.2 billion (1 billion Euros) for fiscal year 2025, which is ending on March 31, 2026. The game cancellations account for $650 million, but Ubisoft plans to achieve its previous cost savings target of 100 million Euros by March, after which it wants to save 200 million Euros in the next two years, ending with around 500 million Euros saved by 2028.
The new internal structure, coming into effect from April, will divide the company into five creative houses, each carrying a different assigned genre, with the goal of recapturing that market. These teams will have their own management and budgets, with "Vantage Studios" overseeing marquee franchises like Assassin's Creed, backed by a 1.16 billion Euro investment from Tencent.
"Today’s market environment requires that the Group step-changes how it is organized and operate. The portfolio refocus will have a significant impact on the Group’s short term financial trajectory, particularly in fiscal years 2026 and 2027, but this reset will strengthen the Group and enable it to renew with sustainable growth and robust cash generation." — Yves Guillemot, Ubisoft Founder & CEO
Ubisoft also stated that as part of its new operating model, it will focus on Open World Adventures and GaaS-native experiences, specifically highlighting "accelerated investments behind player-facing Generative AI," doubling down on its investments into the technology.
All of this has resulted in a 34.37% drop in Ubisoft's share price, a new record-low, trumping the previous 31.92% decline that came in 2013. The firm was trading at 6.64 Euros before chaos broke out, enabling a 5.26 Euros open that eventually plummeted to a 4.27 Euros low. In comparison, the company once traded at above 100 Euros back in July of 2018, but its stock has been caught in a downward spiral since Q4 2020.
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Somehow, Beyond Good & Evil 2 has survived through this slate cleanse, a game that's been in development for 18 years at this point. Beyond Good & Evil 2 was originally unveiled at E3 2008 and shown again at E3 2017, most recently, and Ubisoft has reportedly spent over $500 million keeping it alive, according to Insider Gaming. It's mentioned as part of "Creative House 4" in the press release, alongside Anno, Rayman, and Prince of Persia.
Studios not joining these new creative houses are Ubisoft Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Stockholm because they've been shut down. Ubisoft has also reportedly abolished remote work, calling all employees to the office, which will inevitably result in "soft layoffs" since some people won't or can't come back. The company also plans to close more studios over time as part of this strategic overhaul, but the exact number wasn't disclosed.
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gamerk316 Ubi should no longer be considered an AAA publisher. It also looks like they're planning a sale, given their premium IPs were protected from the rest of Ubisoft.Reply
To me, every indication is Ubisoft is going to be broken up fairly soon. -
hotaru251 Reply
100% this.gamerk316 said:Ubi should no longer be considered an AAA publisher.
The only thing AAA about em is the waste of $ for extremely subpar releases. -
Shiznizzle I cannot think of another publisher that is hated by so many people.Reply
Due to their past language aimed at players, all being pirates; their near yearly substandard bug riddled releases; their lies and all other BS along the way, do i not buy their games.
Silent Hunter 3 had a lovely solution to read errors on your cd-rom drive. The DRM software would step down, on a permanent basis, read rates of all drives on your system till it was able to read again. The drives, all of them - cd-rom/IDE would be permanently slowed down to a crawl. You would have no idea why your system lost %99 of its reading speed.
I am glad they are going under. Dont lie to players.
No, Uplay will not be used to shove a DRM based sales platform down your throat, we were told during the Assassins Creed 2 rollout of Uplay. Look what it mysteriously morphed into since then? Exactly that. Yet more lies.
May they go under. They are owned by Ten Cent i think and were now told to do things they previously did not want to as spending others peoples' money was an easier solution. Now they really do have to look internally at who and what is goign to go -
GingerBraum Reply
I am seriously worried about losing access to my AC games on Steam if that were to happen.Shiznizzle said:I am glad they are going under. Dont lie to players.
No, Uplay will not be used to shove a DRM based sales platform down your throat, we were told during the Assassins Creed 2 rollout of Uplay. Look what it mysteriously morphed into since then? Exactly that. Yet more lies.
May they go under. They are owned by Ten Cent i think and were now told to do things they previously did not want to as spending others peoples' money was an easier solution. Now they really do have to look internally at who and what is goign to go -
thesyndrome Reply
If they do go under and that were to happen, then most likely the games reliant on uplay completely stop working and some will attempt to force Ubisoft to make them available through legal action whilst others will hack the games to work (much like how community modders are keeping old Battlefield and GFWL games alive through DLL replacements).GingerBraum said:I am seriously worried about losing access to my AC games on Steam if that were to happen.
It's possible Ubisoft will sell off the Uplay service to someone else to manage, or just create their own workaround hack for the Uplay launch system and let third-party providers like Steam or GOG host the downloads (I haven't played an Ubisoft game for a LONG time, so I'm unsure if Steam already handles downloading the game files or if it just launches Uplay to do it when you own the game in Steam), some developers have done this for GFWL games that came to Steam and then stopped working once GFWL shut down -
gamerk316 Reply
Even if a game gets delisted, you usually keep access so long as you already purchased it.GingerBraum said:I am seriously worried about losing access to my AC games on Steam if that were to happen. -
TerryLaze Reply
Yeah but if ubi closes down then their launcher most likely won't work anymore and then steam games that need the ubi launcher won't be able to run.gamerk316 said:Even if a game gets delisted, you usually keep access so long as you already purchased it. -
gamerk316 Reply
Ok, fair point.TerryLaze said:Yeah but if ubi closes down then their launcher most likely won't work anymore and then steam games that need the ubi launcher won't be able to run.