Even with the hardware-hungry AI industry causing component shortages and sending memory prices soaring, there’s perhaps one thing I wouldn’t have thought to blame on the datacentres: massive font licensing fees for game developers.
Let me hit the backspace for a spell. At the end of November, commercial font service Fontworks ended its most affordable license plan, LETS (Leading Edge Type Solution), which originally allowed game devs to use their Japanese fonts for only 60,000 yen (or about $380) a year.
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Ultimately, a number of these AI projects were “shelved quietly, with little to show for the investment.” What Pahwa calls Monotype’s “AI Misadventure” allegedly resulted in waves of ongoing layoffs, and may now explain that astronomical font licensing fee; Monotype may be scrabbling to recoup its losses. Pahwa quotes one anonymous colleague, commenting on the situation, “We burned millions and got nothing. Now they’re cutting people to pay for those mistakes.”
As for the Japanese game developers affected by the font fee hike, there’s little good news to be found. Monotype doesn’t just own Fontworks, and a number of other Japanese font makers feature among its portfolio; since Monotype was purchased by private equity firm HGGC back in 2019, the company has hoovered up Fontsmith, URW Type Foundry, as well as Hoefler & Co, according to Automaton. As such, there are few other reasonably priced services offering Japanese typefaces for devs to turn to.
Obviously, this is far from the only example of the twin villains of private equity or AI sinking their fangs into game development. To just point one more finger at AI, surging RAM and SSD prices mean Larian will be doing lots of optimisation in Divinity’s early access, way ahead of the studio’s original development schedule. As for private equity, I have only two letters for you: EA—though thankfully, Lincoln has many more letters and even a few hundred words on why EA’s $55 billion acquisition has everyone terrified.
Bottom line, as Monotype’s layoffs demonstrate, the concern is just how many people will be swept away by big tech’s volatile whims.
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