Articolul e lung, nu pot sa-l pun pe tot. E un rezumat cu ce s-a intamplat pana acum plus informatiile celor de la Kotaku:
Quote Originally Posted by Kotaku
At the start of the summer, as the world roiled from multiple crises, something unusual and essential happened in video games. It started with a Tweet, then another, one by one as people—mostly women—began speaking out regarding sexual harassment, abuse, and other misconduct at Ubisoft.

Testimonials followed, then reporting in English and French, the native language of the Paris-headquartered publisher of some of the biggest video game franchises of all time. The accounts of misconduct stretched back for years, spanned the company’s studios around the globe, and reached its highest levels of power.

“So many of us have been waiting for this moment to happen for years,” a former Ubisoft developer recently told Kotaku, as we spoke to developers and others affected by Ubisoft about what these last seven weeks have amounted to.

“The floodgates started to open once at least one person stepped up and said, ‘Hey, I have a problem with this person, and this person works for Ubisoft,” the source recalled. “Then a lot of people felt safer to speak up.”

What followed then were condemnations, resignations and vows to do better. Heads rolled. Or at least some of them did.
Ubisoft's #MeToo Reckoning, Two Months Later