Thread: The head of Mafia 3 studio Hangar 13 is leaving 2K, Mafia prequel is reportedly in development

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Hangar 13 studio head Haden Blackman is leaving the Mafia 3 developer and its parent company 2K.

Blackman is stepping down in order "to pursue his passion at a new endeavour," according to an announcement initially shared internally to staff at the studio (via GamesIndustry.biz).

"We are grateful for Haden's leadership in establishing Hangar 13, building and uniting teams in Novato, Brighton and Czech, and releasing multiple studio-defining Mafia games and collections," it added.

"What Haden helped build will continue to carry forward and grow for years to come. We support all of our employees pursuing their passions, and we wish nothing but the best for him in what's next."

Blackman has led Hangar 13, which is based at 2K's headquarters in the San Francisco Bay Area, since the studio's formation, which was announced in 2014.

Previously, Blackman spent 13 years at LucasArts, where he served as studio head and franchise director before departing in 2010.

Blackman will be replaced by Hangar 13 Brighton's studio head, Nick Baynes.

It was claimed in November that 2K had cancelled a new title from Hangar 13. Codenamed Volt, the project had reportedly been in development in various forms since 2017.

But people said to be familiar with 2K's decision told Bloomberg that work on the unannounced project has ceased.

The article's author, Jason Schreier, claimed Volt was a new IP and that rumours of Hangar 13 making a Mafia 4 "were always false, aside from their early attempts in 2016-2017".

In its second quarter earnings statement last November, 2K parent company Take-Two said it had taken "a $53 million impairment charge related to the company's decision not to proceed with further development of an unannounced title", but no further details about the project were revealed.

An earlier leak described Volt as an "open-world sci-fi title with supernatural elements" and "Cthulhu meets Saints Row".

 
I guess they made him an offer they couldn't refuse.

Seriously though, I really want Mafia 4. Mafia 3 after patches and DLC was amazing. Its the only game that for me has ever rivalled the Vice City soundtrack.
 
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Kotaku reports that developer Hangar 13's UK studio in Brighton is leading development on a prequel set before the events of the Mafia trilogy.

According to the report, the game's codename is Nero and will be developed in Unreal Engine 5, as opposed to the Mafia 3 engine used for the Mafia Trilogy remasters in 2020.
 
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In the last 24 hours, 2K Games subsidiary Hangar 13 has laid off dozens of employees across its global offices, with reportedly up to 50 employees dismissed from the Novato, CA office that created Mafia III.

With only 87 employees at the studio before the layoff, that means the number of workers at the Novato office has been cut in half.

According to Kotaku (which confirmed the layoffs with a 2K spokesperson), the announcement came with a message from Nick Baynes, head of Hangar 13's Brighton, U.K. office. Baynes apologized to the remaining developers at Hangar 13, and promised that the team is working to deliver "local leadership and structure" before Novato staffers.

The Novato office has apparently been in a holding pattern since the departure of Haden Blackman earlier this month. It also has been in a longer holding pattern since the cancellation of a project code-named "Volt," which was supposed to be a new property for the Mafia III studio.

Employees were initially told that there would be no immediate layoffs following Volt's cancellation. It appears that in the months since then, the studio was not able to adequately find new roles for its employees.

Since that cancellation, employees in Novato have apparently been assisting with the development of other 2K-published games like Marvel's Midnight Suns and Tiny Tina's Wonderlands. Hangar 13 is reportedly being restructured to focus on more Mafia games, with some employees reportedly working on new versions of theTop Spin tennis series.

Calling the decision to lay off employees "always difficult," a 2K spokesperson did tell Kotaku that the company is looking to find some laid off employees position at other 2K developers, and that the publisher is "committed to the future of Hangar 13."

This is the latest brutal round of layoffs for Hangar 13, which was previously battered with intense layoffs in 2017 and 2018. Mafia III, the last game the studio shipped, was released five years ago.