Bungie CEO Pete Parsons has announced that he’s leaving the company one decade after taking on the role. In an update on Thursday, Parsons wrote that he has “decided to pass the torch” to longtime Bungie developer Justin Truman.
Parsons has worked at Bungie for over 20 years and led the studio through the launch of Destiny 2 in 2017, along with the release of its major expansion pack, The Final Shape.
In 2022, Sony Interactive Entertainment purchased Bungie for $3.6 billion. The studio has since contended with the layoffs of hundreds of workers and delayed its extraction shooter Marathon following lackluster alpha test feedback. In May, an artist accused Bungie of using their work in Marathon without permission.
“We’ve been through so much together: we launched a bold new chapter for Destiny, built an enviable, independent live ops organization capable of creating and publishing its own games, and joined the incredible family at Sony Interactive Entertainment,” Parsons writes.
Truman joined Bungie in 2010 and became chief development officer in 2022. He says the team is “currently heads down” on both Marathon and Destiny, adding that “we’ll have more to show you in both of these worlds later this year.”
Today's links Ada Palmer's "Inventing the Renaissance": A tour-de-force, a magnum opus, a work of…
Future The People Do Not Yearn for AutomationNilay Patel | The Verge “Not everything about…
The global energy industry has long depended on seismic data to locate oil and gas…
Artificial intelligence is quietly transforming every corner of modern industry. From predictive maintenance in heavy…
Additive manufacturing has always lived in a bit of a gray area. Some see it…
The global energy industry has long depended on seismic data to locate oil and gas…
This website uses cookies.