I am sad to hear that people have lost their jobs. Having been on both sides of the table it is a gut wrenching experience and I don't envy anyone involved. Wizards lost some amazing game designers, business people, marketing experts, and editors today. Many of whom I worked with for years and consider good friends.
Having recently gone through this myself I thought I'd share my perspective on losing my job.
It was the worst day of my life.
Working at Wizards was amazing. It was (and still is) a collection of incredibly talented people, making fantastic games, that enrich the lives of those who play them. I cherish the nine and a half years I worked there and I would not trade the experience for anything. For this, losing my job at Wizards was one of the worst days of my life. I went through all the stages of emotion, from guilt through anger, but I never spent too much time dwelling on the negativity of my situation. For the five months I was out of work, I treated my unemployment as a chance to reconnect with my family and reflect on my career with specific intent of coming out of the situation in a better place. Yes, it sucked being on unemployment for five months, applying for over a hundred jobs, going on a dozen interviews and getting passed over. It was a difficult period in my life but in that time I learned from failure, celebrated success, and grew as a person. Onward and upward was my mantra.
It was the best day of my life
7 months later, I can comfortably say that losing my job at Wizards was one of the best days of my life because it forced me to realize that there was something bigger and better out there for me. Early on in my job search, I decided that I wanted to work on the Xbox business at Microsoft. After countless job applications and many interviews, I landed a job working on partnerships and promotions for Xbox 360 and first party game titles (e.g. Halo). After two months, I feel like my career in the games industry is on a new trajectory and I couldn't be happier. I work at an amazing company, with an outstanding group of people, and every day I learn more about the games business.
Today, I am sad for my friends and loss they are feeling. But I can't forget that many of my former WOTC colleagues have moved onto greater opportunity and tomorrow brings the hope that Andy, Jesse, Peter, and all those affected will soon be onto bigger and better opportunities.
Onward and upwards friends.