Riot Games,
the studio best known for League of Legends, has agreed to pay $100m (£74.3m)
to settle a 2018 class-action gender discrimination case.
The
settlement will "remedy violations against approximately 1,065 women
employees and 1,300 women contract workers", California's Department
of Fair Employment & Housing (DFEH) wrote.
DFEH said
the firm engaged in "systemic sex discrimination and harassment".
Riot Games
said it must "take responsibility for the past".
The company
will pay $80m (£59m) to members of the class action suit and about $20m (£15m)
will cover legal costs.
The 2018
case followed investigations by the Los Angeles Times and the news website
Kotaku.
According to
the original complaint against the company, Riot was accused of fostering a
"bro culture" and faced a range of allegations.
These
included that women had been sexually objectified, with an email chain that
rated the company's "hottest women employees", and that unsolicited
images of male genitalia had been shown to workers by their bosses and
colleagues many business listings.
Industry
problem
As part of
the settlement, Riot agreed to workplace reforms, independent expert analysis
of its pay, hiring, and promotion practices, and to be monitored for instances
of sexual harassment and "retaliation" at its California offices for
three years.
The company
must also set aside $18m (13.2m) to fund diversity, equity, and inclusion
programs and create 40 full-time positions in engineering, quality assurance,
or art-design roles for its former contract workers.
DFEH
Director Kevin Kish wrote that, if accepted by the court, the settlement would
lead to lasting change at Riot Games and "send the message that all
industries in California, including the gaming industry, must provide equal pay
and workplaces free from discrimination and harassment" business listings.
Riot had
initially agreed to settle the case for $10m in 2019, but the DFEH and another
agency had blocked the deal arguing that the amount to which victims were
entitled was much higher.
The company
said it had to face the fact that it hadn't always lived up to its
values, telling the Washington Post: "While we're proud of how far
we've come since 2018, we must also take responsibility for the past".
"We
hope that this settlement properly acknowledges those who had negative
experiences at Riot."
In a letter
to staff, published online, Riot's executive team said the settlement was,
"the right thing to do, for both the company and those whose experiences
at Riot fell short of our standards and values" free business listings.
The company
told the BBC that since 2018 it had made improvements across the workplace,
including hiring its first chief people officer and its first chief diversity
officer, rewriting its values, mandating new training programs, and enlarging
its diversity and inclusion team.
Riot Games
is not the only prominent games firm to face questions about workplace culture.
The DFEH is
also taking action against Activision Blizzard, the company behind the
games World of Warcraft, over watch, and Call of Duty.
Activision
Blizzard recently reached an $18m (£13.2m) settlement with the US Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) over claims of sexual discrimination
and harassment.
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