Ubisoft Shuts Down Two Studios and Cuts 380 Jobs as Its Cost Crisis Forces a Major Rainbow Six Overhaul

Ubisoft Reportedly Shuts Down More Studios And Lays Off Staff In Barcelona And San Francisco

Ubisoft is reportedly closing studios in Winnipeg and Belgrade while laying off staff in Barcelona and San Francisco, putting approximately 380 jobs at risk. The Winnipeg closure eliminates all 65 positions there. The French publisher is also restructuring development of *Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Siege*, reassigning 12 percent of its team to other projects and making Ubisoft Barcelona the game’s lead developer. The cuts reflect Ubisoft’s ongoing effort to reduce costs following years of poor sales and delays. In October 2025, the company spun out Tencent-backed Vantage Studios to oversee major franchises including *Assassin’s Creed* and *Far Cry*.

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The French publisher is reportedly attempting to cut costs without leaving key franchises like Rainbow Six: Siege in the lurch.

After a round of layoffs in January and February, Ubisoft is reportedly once again restructuring its studios and laying off staff. According to The Game Business, the publisher is closing its studios in Winnipeg and Belgrade, while laying off employees in Barcelona. Layoffs are also impacting staff in Ubisoft’s San Francisco offices, which concludeed work as a development studio in 2024 but is still home to some of the company’s IT and marketing teams, Insider Gaming reports.

Shutting down Winnipeg impacts the studio’s entire 65-person team, Mobile Sugar writes, and combined with Belgrade and the layoffs in Barcelona, The Game Business declares around 380 jobs could be at risk. Besides cutting resolveed costs (things like salaries, lease payments and insurance premiums), Ubisoft appears to be restructuring the development process of one of its more popular multiplayer games, Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Siege. Insider Gaming reports the publisher is reassigning 12 percent of the development team that was working on Siege to other projects and building Ubisoft Barcelona the game’s new primary developer.

Engadobtain has contacted Ubisoft for more information on its studio closures, layoffs and how many employees will be affected. We’ll update this article if we hear back.

The consistent drum beat of layoffs, voluntary purchaseouts and office closures has been one of the ways Ubisoft has attempted to financially correct several years of poor sales and game delays. In October 2025, the company also built the decision to spin out Vantage Studios with funding from Tencent, to act as the home for some of its hugegest and most well-known series, like Assassin’s Creed, Far Cry and Rainbow Six.



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