Following allegations of toxic workplace culture, Activision Blizzard's social accounts have gone completely dark.

As spotted by Redditor VolleNommer over at GamingLeaksAndRumours, all of the accounts for games developed by Activision Blizzard have been completely silent since July 21.

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Some of the main accounts listed in the post include Call of Duty, Overwatch, and developers like Raven Software and Treyarch, but it also goes further into accounts for games like World of Warcraft, Crash Bandicoot, and Spyro. All of the social media accounts for these games have been completely silent from July 21 onwards, which is when the allegations were first reported on.

Although some games like Crash and Spyro aren't too surprising to go silent on social media considering that they're single-player focused games, the live service titles like Warzone, Overwatch, and World of Warcraft usually Tweet every single day to let players know of updates within the game.

These updates have still been happening, they just haven't been posted on social media anywhere. According to the Reddit post, playlist updates for Black Ops Cold War and Warzone have still been happening, they just haven't been openly talked about. This social media silence seems to be stretching to any and all Activision Blizzard developers as well, with Treyarch, Raven Software, Toys for Bob, and King all being silent, just to name a few.

One example where it's clear that an announcement was going to be made was for Overwatch, which just introduced the Malevento map to the game. Although some sites reported on the map coming to the game, all announcements have since been pulled, so it was likely supposed to be revealed yesterday, before being cancelled due to the allegations.

Activision Blizzard's silence across all of its social media platforms shouldn't come as a surprise. It's likely that the company is trying to organise an official PR response, and seeing Tweets from Crash Bandicoot trying to advertise his new collection of games might just stir more controversy.

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