While the makers of the latest Call of Duty games are apologizing to fans about the state of Warzone and Vanguard, there's at least one employee who is taking issue with Activision Blizzard's public stance. In fact, the Call of Duty developer is singling out the company's approach to its labor issues as a big reason why the games are being seen as subpar.

Activision Blizzard has seen several controversies hit over the last year, including multiple state treasurers file lawsuits against the Call of Duty makers over its handling of allegations of toxic workplaces. There have also been controversies over the quality of both Call of Duty: Vanguard and Call of Duty: Warzone as players have repeatedly called the company out for various bugs, glitches, and uninspired gameplay. Last week, the studio issued an apology on social media promising fixes, but a response from a quality assurance worker to the company's tweet gained quite a bit of attention.

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One of the big controversies that have hit the Call of Duty maker is a rather large strike of its employees over the company's behavior, including its handling of the firing of Raven Software employees. Kate Anderson responded quickly to the tweet with a fair amount of skepticism. They added that the company had sent similar emails to employees over the last few months without taking any real action to change its behavior.

Anderson added that despite several Activision Blizzard employees leaving the company recently, the firm has mostly refused to talk to those who have stayed. They added in their tweet that the state of the Call of Duty games was a direct result of the company's behavior.

Many people followed Anderson's post by agreeing that they believed that quite a few of the problems that have come from the Call of Duty games were caused by internal issues. As Anderson claimed, the firm has made noise about wanting to change and correct problems that have occurred, only to not really follow through on the next step. With the QA Tester raising the specter of that being the case as far as "fixing" issues with Vanguard and Warzone, time will tell whether Activision Blizzard follows through on the promises it tweeted out in regard to the quality of its most recent Call of Duty projects.

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