Microsoft Making Some Temp Starfield Testers Into Full-Time Unionized Employees

Temp Starfield testers are becoming unionized as full-time employees for Microsoft, and we've got the details here!
Starfield Planet Ship Mech
Image: Bethesda

In a move that could have ripple effects throughout the gaming industry, Microsoft has announced that it is converting some temporary testers who worked on Bethesda’s game Starfield into full-time employees represented by a union. This decision comes after Microsoft agreed earlier this year to recognize and bargain with ZeniMax Workers United, a union representing quality assurance workers at the company’s ZeniMax Media subsidiary.

As found by Bloomberg, this was a landmark moment, marking the first time that Microsoft had agreed to recognize a labor union. The conversion of some Starfield testers into full-time, unionized employees is a significant development. It shows that Microsoft is serious about its commitment to engaging with unions and working collaboratively with them to improve the working conditions for its employees.

This move is likely to be welcomed by many in the gaming industry, as it could pave the way for more workers to unionize and bargain for better wages, benefits, and working conditions. It could also help improve the industry’s public image, which isn’t the best, thanks to reports of poor working conditions and employee mistreatment.

There are few other industries that force their employees to crunch like the video game industry does. A notable industry that works their employees harder is anime, which has many reports of forcing employees to stay late and overwork.

Microsoft and ZeniMax Workers United haven’t revealed the terms of the deal, but it’s believed the testers will get significant raises and benefits as full-time employees. They will also be given copies of Bethesda‘s Starfield game, which is weird as a new perk. I know many video game testers for 2k, and they’re outsourced, but they receive copies of the games they help test, even if it’s for a short time.

If you work on a video game, you deserve a copy, but that’s just my opinion. How this move will affect the development of Starfield remains to be seen, but it is clearly a significant development for the gaming industry as a whole.

Jorge A. Aguilar

Jorge A. Aguilar

Jorge A. Aguilar, also known as Aggy, is the current Assigning Editor.

He started his career as an esports, influencer, and streaming writer for Sportskeeda. He then moved to GFinity Esports to cover streaming, games, guides, and news before moving to the Social team where he ended his time as the Lead of Social Content.

He also worked a writer and editor for both Pro Game Guides and Dot Esports, and as a writer for PC Invasion, Attack of the Fanboy, and Android Police. Aggy is the former Managing Editor and Operations Overseer of N4G Unlocked and a former Gaming editor for WePC.

Throughout his time in the industry, he's trained over 100 writers, written thousands of articles on multiple sites, written more reviews than he cares to count, and edited tens of thousands of articles. He has also written some games published by Tales, some books, and a comic sold to Telus International.

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