Ubisoft Toronto

Ubisoft Toronto Inc. is a Canadian video game developer and a studio of Ubisoft based in Toronto. The studio was established under Jade Raymond in September 2010. Games developed by Ubisoft Toronto include Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Blacklist, Far Cry 5, Starlink: Battle for Atlas, Far Cry 6, and Watch Dogs Legion.

History

Ubisoft announced in July 2009 that it was establishing a Toronto-based development studio. Yannis Mallat, the chief executive officer (CEO) of Ubisoft Montreal, was to become Ubisoft Toronto's CEO, while the government of Ontario was to invest CA$263 million over a course of 10 years to create up to 800 jobs.[1][2] Unlike other Ubisoft studios, Ubisoft Toronto was immediately allowed to lead development of its games, whereas others start by only supporting larger studios like Ubisoft Montreal, though Ubisoft Toronto also served to support Montreal as part of its initial role as a sister studio.[3][4]

By September 2009, Jade Raymond was put in charge of establishing the studio.[2] Most of the studio's staff in its development phase, including Raymond, transferred to the new location from Ubisoft Montreal. Key hires included producer Alexandre Parizeau and creative director Maxime Béland, who were brought on for the production of a new game in the Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell series, and were considered co-founders of the studio alongside Raymond.[5][6] A second, smaller development team for an undisclosed project was headed up by Lesley Phord-Toy, and Rima Brek was put in charge of the studio's internal Technology Group.[5][7] By May 2010, Ubisoft Toronto had received more than 2,000 job applications.[6]

Ubisoft Toronto's offices were established from a former General Electric building in the Junction Triangle neighborhood of Toronto.[4][8] Ubisoft Toronto began operating in late 2009 and formally opened in September 2010.[9][10]

By March 2012, Ubisoft Toronto had grown to 200 people, and to 300 by September 2013.[9][10] By the latter, the studio had received 30,000 applications and given 1,800 job interviews.[10] In September 2012, Ubisoft Toronto received an internal performance capture studio.[11] The studio's debut project, Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Blacklist, was released in August 2013 to critical success.[3][10] Raymond left the studio and was succeeded as general manager by Parizeau.[12] By July 2015, Ubisoft Toronto was developing an original intellectual property (IP).[13] This game was later revealed to be Starlink: Battle for Atlas, an action-adventure game with optional toys-to-life integration.[14] The game was released in 2018 as the studio's first own IP.[15] As of July 2017, Ubisoft Toronto has 600 staff members.[16]

Near the end of June 2020 and into July 2020, a wave of accusations related to the MeToo movement swept through the video game industry, including several directed at some Ubisoft employees. Over one hundred employees of Ubisoft Toronto wrote to Parizeau in late June to report concerns related to sexual misconduct and the lack of action taken by management and human resources in response to their prior reports. Ubisoft announced it had investigated these reports, and in the case of Ubisoft Toronto, had requested studio co-founder Maxime Béland resign from the company. Speaking to Kotaku, some of these employees stated that there were still additional problems at the studio that went beyond Béland and they were still seeking signs of larger change from the studio and Ubisoft as a whole.[4] Parizeau left the company in February 2021 and was replaced by Istvan Tajnay, who had previously been the managing director for Ubisoft Berlin.[17]

In December 2021, it was announced that the studio was developing a remake of Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell (2002); reports on the project appeared earlier in October.[18] After 2 years, Tajnay left the company in July of 2023 and was replaced by Darryl Long, who had previously been the managing director for Ubisoft Winnipeg and Ubisoft Singapore.[19]

In June 2024, it was announced that Ubisoft Toronto would assist Ubisoft Montreal in the development of the Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time remake.[20] Later that month, 33 employees were let go as part of a "targeted realignment to ensure it can deliver on its ambitious roadmap."[21] The studio laid off 40 employees in February 2026.[22]

NEXT Competition

Ubisoft Toronto NEXT (Formerly Ubisoft Toronto NXT Showcase) is an annual competition held by Ubisoft Toronto, aimed towards post secondary students and recent graduates.[23] The competition covers various job families and tasks students to complete a relevant submission that uses essential skills for the role, with the winner of each category being given an internship. As of the 2025 competition, 95 students have won internships at the studio.[23][24][25]

Games developed

Lead developer

Supportive development

References

  1. Mike Fahey. Ubisoft Toronto Brings 800 Jobs To Ontario Kotaku, 6 July 2009, retrieved 12 March 2018^
  2. Tor Thorsen. Jade Raymond heading up Ubisoft Toronto GameSpot, 1 September 2009, retrieved 29 August 2019^
  3. Mitch Dyer. The Rise of Ubisoft Toronto: How a New Team Nailed its AAA Debut IGN, 4 September 2013, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  4. Ethan Gach. Ubisoft Employees Have 'Grave Concerns' Over Toronto Studio's Misconduct Allegations Kotaku, July 6, 2020, retrieved July 6, 2020^
  5. Mathew Kumar. Building On Conviction: Inside Ubisoft Toronto, Page 2 of 4 Gamasutra, 25 May 2010, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  6. Mathew Kumar. Building On Conviction: Inside Ubisoft Toronto, Page 3 of 4 Gamasutra, 25 May 2010, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  7. Mathew Kumar. Building On Conviction: Inside Ubisoft Toronto, Page 4 of 4 Gamasutra, 25 May 2010, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  8. Mathew Kumar. Building On Conviction: Inside Ubisoft Toronto, Page 1 of 4 Gamasutra, 25 May 2010, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  9. Rachel Weber. Jade's Empire: Building Ubisoft's Super-Studio GamesIndustry.biz, 8 March 2017, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  10. Brendan Sinclair. How to build a AAA studio GamesIndustry.biz, 6 September 2013, retrieved 29 August 2019^
  11. Andrew Goldfarb. Ubisoft Opens New Performance Capture Studio IGN, 14 September 2012, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  12. Brian Crecente. Ubisoft Toronto managing director Jade Raymond leaves company Polygon, 20 October 2014, retrieved 31 August 2019^
  13. Cassidee Moser. Ubisoft Toronto is Working on a New AAA IP IGN, 14 July 2015, retrieved 29 August 2019^
  14. Dean Takahashi. Ubisoft unveils Starlink video game with toys that attach to your controller VentureBeat, 12 June 2017, retrieved 12 March 2018^
  15. Christopher Dring. Ubisoft Toronto: "We can bring life back to toys-to-life" GamesIndustry.biz, 12 June 2017, retrieved 12 March 2018^
  16. Chad Sapieha. Ubisoft Toronto's big bet: A new spin on toy-based video games with Starlink Financial Post, 6 July 2017, retrieved 29 August 2019^
  17. James Batchelor. Ubisoft Toronto appoints new managing director GamesIndustry.biz, 3 February 2021, retrieved 4 February 2021^
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  19. Ubisoft appoints veteran managing directors for Toronto and Montpellier studios^
  20. Mariella Moon. Ubisoft Toronto is helping out with the troubled Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time remake Engadget, 2024-06-04, retrieved 2024-06-29^
  21. Andy Chalk. Less than a month after joining work on the Sands of Time remake, Ubisoft Toronto lays off 33 employees 'to ensure it can deliver on its ambitious roadmap' PC Gamer, 2024-06-28, retrieved 2024-06-29^
  22. Sophie McEvoy. Ubisoft Toronto hit by layoffs, 40 staff impacted GamesIndustry.biz, 20 February 2026, retrieved 21 February 2026^
  23. Mannat Mehta. Ubisoft Toronto NEXT 2023 Winners — Celebrating 10 Years of Supporting Student Talent in Ontario - Ubisoft Toronto 2023-05-12, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  24. Erica Chong. Ubisoft Toronto NEXT 2024 Winners — Celebrating Ontario’s Student Talent in Game Dev - Ubisoft Toronto 2024-03-28, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  25. Erica Chong. Announcing the Winners of Ubisoft Toronto NEXT 2025 - Ubisoft Toronto 2025-03-27, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  26. administrator. Congratulations to the 2018 NXT Showcase winners! - Ubisoft Toronto 2018-05-16, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  27. administrator. The 2019 Ubisoft Toronto NEXT winners! - Ubisoft Toronto 2019-05-09, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  28. administrator. Ontario Post-Secondary Students Shine in the Ubisoft Toronto NEXT Challenge - Ubisoft Toronto 2020-05-28, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  29. administrator. Ontario students wow judges during the Ubisoft Toronto NEXT competition - Ubisoft Toronto 2021-05-20, retrieved 2025-04-18^
  30. administrator. Ubisoft Toronto NEXT: 2022 Winners’ Innovation, Imagination Impress Judges - Ubisoft Toronto 2022-05-12, retrieved 2025-04-18^
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  39. Our Games Ubisoft Toronto, 2 November 2022, retrieved 4 July 2024^
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