So Much Potential Wasted By Greedy Excec's and PM's - Concept Artist Zynga Employee Review

1.0
May 31, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Amazing amenities (while they lasted, since I left they've cut a few): x3 meals a day, stocked kitchens on all the floors, lots of activities on campus and off, and a freaking brew master on site!!! -Really talented artists and developers, with tons of diverse experiences to learn from -Good pay for artists -Great insurance and health benefits

Cons

-Focused solely on metrics and the thought that all will fall in line (art, fun, etc.) if the metrics and focus testing says so. -Absentee Exec staff, upper management were hands off with the teams, placing burdens on middle/lower management that they usually weren't skilled for. Until when things went wrong and blaming the Individual Contributors on their failures, or when things went right and patting themselves on the backs with large bonus' for themselves only while ignoring the teams themselves for the hard work. -Art management is 25/75: A quarter of the art management team cares, mostly, about their teams and the projects the work on. The rest could care less. Some have open resentment for the art teams they manage and have no interest in games or gaming outside of their day job. These are a majority at the company, people managing creatives who make games, but have never owned a console or played any games outside of that one time they downloaded Candy Crush and played it on the train one. Really quite demoralizing. -Art Directors/Creative Directors are mostly checked out, could care less or are completely out of touch with their teams and or industry. With few exceptions, the art management, all the way to the top comes across misguided and aloof. Spending time focusing on ideas concepts that are either unclear in their benefits to the projects and teams, or outright pandering to upper management that is mandating tasks based off buzzwords they heard at some conference. -Limited job growth for creatives. The teams options have been narrowing down to casino/gambling games leaving less and less options for creatives to go to, once their game has been shut down or sunsetted to India. -Product Managers being told they are the designers and creators of the games, and given carte blanche in the say of how games are made. To watch 22 year olds straight out of college, getting paid 25,000-50,000 dollars more than you to interpret a spreadsheet and then tell you how to make games is quite demoralizing. Especially watching the consistent failure rate of that business model. When I left, they were only hiring more PMs and giving them more stake in the overall choices made for the games. -Massive Attrition. People coming and going and a constant and regular rate. And the layoffs are hugely demoralizing. Everyone is constantly aware that it could happen at any moment, and thus people are never able to relax and just work the best they can. They often working to just not get laid off.

Explore other reviews about Zynga

5.0
Jun 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing Company - people are great, the work is fun, and everyone is happy to be here.

Cons

None. fun company, good people.

2.0
Jul 10, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Working at a leader in the mobile gaming industry is a huge plus on your resume. Plus, having the opportunity to work in gaming is fun. - Collaborating with some of the most smartest, creative and innovative people in the gaming/tech space - It's a great opportunity to learn mobile gaming and hone your skillset. Zynga has a strong inclusive culture and it can be very welcoming initially. You should always be learning at every stage of your career and you can definitely do so at the company - You can connect with some really cool people

Cons

- Pay was slightly below average and not always congruent/1:1 to your skillset and experience - Limited opportunities and typical corporate rhetoric/structure holds the company back from the next levels of success. Once you realize that you have no one really advocating for you to move up and or take on more responsibilities, you have to be honest about your future at the company. - Some management/teammates are egoistical and passive aggressive in their behavior towards certain employees and clear favoritism is shown. - The relationship you have with your manager will make or break your career, which is frustrating. If you have a manager that will look out for you/advocacte your career, you'll do fine. If you don't, you're stuck

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All