Microsoft has been asked by a group of Activision Blizzard employees whether or not it will object to internal unionization efforts, specifically at Call of Duty developer Raven Software.

According toAxios, in response to an open letter, the company has said that it will not object to the union efforts, which have largely gained momentum in the wake ofActivision Blizzard‘songoing scandals.

Microsoft says it won’t object if Activision recognises Call of Duty studio’s potential union

In the letter, which has been shared with Axios, workers asked CEOSatya NadellawhetherMicrosofthas authorizedActivisionto rule on the recognition of the union.

The Raven workers also accuse Activision of using “union-busting” tactics to prevent their action, and call on Microsoft to stop the “campaign that is being waged against us”.

Activision exec tells staff that forming a union ‘could affect game quality’

Responding to the letter, a Microsoft spokesperson told Axios: “Microsoft will not stand in the way if Activision Blizzard recognizes a union.”

The statement continues: “Microsoft respects Activision Blizzard employees’ right to choose whether to be represented by a labour organization and we will honour those decisions.”

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Axios noted that the statement did not clarify what stage the discussions are currently at.

A version of the letter is also slated to run in Microsoft’s backyard this weekend in the Sunday edition of the Seattle Timespic.twitter.com/e1sHUSKFLY

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In February, Activision’s vice president of QA Christian Arends sent a message to staff in an attempt to dissuade them fromjoining a union.

In January, a 34-strong group called the Game Workers Alliance officially asked parent company Activision Blizzardto recognise the union, which would be the first ever at a major North American game development studio.

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Further reading

In November, Activision informed 12 QA workers at Raven that their contracts would be terminated on January 28. The layoffs would reduce Raven’s QA team of 40 staff, which mainly works on Warzone, by just over 30%, according to protestors who had been on strike fornearly two months.

It’s claimed the affected staff were let go in “good standing”, meaning they hadn’t underperformed or committed any sackable offences, and that the dismissals were announced at a time when Warzone was earning $5.2 million daily.

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