EA cancels Black Panther game, closes Cliffhanger, and lays off an unspecified number of developers

Cliffhanger Games' Black Panther game has been canceled at EA. The studio has been shut down, and employees have been laid off across the company.

Matt Buckley

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EA cancels Black Panther game, closes Cliffhanger, and lays off an unspecified number of developers, image source: Marvel's Black Panther, Developer: Cliffhanger Games.
EA cancels Black Panther game, closes Cliffhanger, and lays off an unspecified number of developers Source: Marvel's Black Panther, Developer: Cliffhanger Games.

Today, IGN confirmed that Electronic Arts has cancelled the in-development Black Panther game; the studio working on it, Cliffhanger Games, has been shut down, and an unspecified number of employees across several areas of EA have been laid off. IGN has reported that the number of laid-off employees is fewer than the three hundred affected last month. Cliffhanger Games had yet to release a project and was formed in 2023 with some team members who had worked on the Shadow of Mordor series, a studio that was recently shut down by Warner Bros. This Black Panther game was one of three games Marvel made in a deal with EA. The other two games, an unannounced title and an Iron Man game, appear unaffected by this news.

Black Panther game cancelled at EA, studio shut down, unknown number of layoffs

EA has had a rocky few years, despite the major publisher’s headcount steadily increasing for the last decade, according to reporting from Game File. Just last month, around three hundred employees were laid off, with one hundred of those layoffs affecting Respawn Entertainment, alongside the cancellation of a Titanfall game. In an email response to IGN, EA Entertainment president Laura Miele explained that the publisher plans to focus on its successful franchises. This includes the upcoming Battlefield 6, The Sims, Skate, Apex Legends, along with the previously mentioned Iron Man game, Respawn’s next Jedi title, and BioWare’s in-progress Mass Effect title.

In a statement about the layoffs, Miele said the company’s goal is to “sharpen our focus and put our creative energy behind the most significant growth opportunities.” In the last few years, EA has worked to find laid-off employees further work in other studios, and that appears to be happening again here. Though there’s no way to know how effective this will be or how many employees will be able to find a new position. This seemed to be the case with BioWare earlier this year, as production on Dragon Age: The Veilguard came to an end, there was not enough work to be done on the upcoming Mass Effect game to keep employees working.

Video game development has always been an unpredictable field, but the last few years have seen unprecedented levels of layoffs across the industry. Just in 2024 alone, an estimated 14,600 developers were laid off, according to a tracker updated by Riot Games technical artist Farhan Noor. Hopefully, the developers affected can find more stable work, and the industry as a whole can move past this tumultuous time.

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Matt Buckley

Author: Matt Buckley

After studying creative writing at Emerson College in Boston, Matt published a travel blog based on a two-month solo journey around the world, wrote for SmarterTravel, and worked on an Antarctic documentary series for NOVA, Antarctic Extremes. Today, for Gamepressure, Matt covers Nintendo news and writes reviews for Switch and PC titles. Matt enjoys RPGs like Pokemon and Breath of the Wild, as well as fighting games like Super Smash Bros., and the occasional action game like Ghostwire Tokyo or Gods Will Fall. Outside of video games, Matt is also a huge Dungeons & Dragons nerd, a fan of board games like Wingspan, an avid hiker, and after recently moving to California, an amateur surfer.