Riot Games reviews

4.0

75% would recommend to a friend

(1,042 total reviews)
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Dylan Jadeja

68% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Riot Games has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 1,042 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Riot Games employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Médias et communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
2.0
Jul 22, 2015

Squandering Opportunities

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work we do at Riot never gets dull. There are tons of amazing challenges and plenty of work for you to reach out and take. You can try new strategies and innovate on existing work. I would love to hire people who work at Riot for other companies as they are forced to innovate and push boundaries regularly. A majority of the company really cares about League, and it is great that everyone has high empathy for our players, as we are players ourselves. The perks are genuinely outstanding and I haven't seen better in another game company.

Cons

Over time, Riot has started dramatically sliding into a downward trajectory due to our explosive growth. Long gone are the days where everyone worked hard together and strive to provide tangible results towards player value. There are still pockets where this exists, but are more of the exception than the rule. Friendships, nepotism, and saying the right thing in meetings are now far more important to career growth than anything else. There is a major focus on bringing in new people who are considered awesome with only scattered emphasis on giving people opportunities to grow themselves. Some of those same awesome people then leave within 6 months. Taking on new projects and demonstrating results there are often looked upon negatively if you don't execute them flawlessly. We have become super risk adverse and are so afraid of making a mistake many people sit in paralysis. We constantly pat ourselves on the back and say how awesome we are and then remind ourselves to be humble in our awesomeness. There certainly is lots of awesome stuff we do, but there is a ton of dead weight and very little real humility. We are proud of our feedback culture, and how open and trasparent we are. For some parts of Riot that is really true and those people are very lucky. For other parts, people live in fear of leaving real feedback for fear of retaliation. We are in the middle of our review process and it is almost all anonymous due to that fear. These problems are more significant for women at Riot, because they routinely seem to get the short end of the stick. Double standards, worse pay, higher expectations and faster to be exited. If you are a smooth talker and want what is probably a safe and interesting job for years to come, I would highly recommend Riot. If you want to be valued by your results, and paid a comparable amount to other companies in Santa Monica, pick somewhere else.

2.0
Jul 19, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Unlimited PTO - The office - Some really great people - Lots of potential if the management and cultural issues get fixed

Cons

Riot has tons of potential but as of now there's a huge layer of people and management systems in place that prevent any attempt at improving the day to day for the teams and making the culture more in line with how it portrays itself. It's all about playing politics/pleasing the right people and not getting results. Mark & Brandon's vision on management and culture is what got me to join the studio and it was sad that the walk was so far from the talk. Better you know what to expect and make your decision accordingly. Because Riot is a huge list of teams though, you might get lucky and end up on a team that is very much like the talk. But if you're going to management you better be ready to deal with a load of ambiguous politics and be willing to follow orders without making waves. A mere disagreement with the wrong person can lead you out. Be also prepared to be pressured to bring results and be blocked by the very same people. They somehow expect you to bring results while keeping things the same or not rubbing anyone off in the change process. You were told you were hired to bring results and bring your expertise on how other companies are organized, but in truth you were brought in to fulfill an illusion and integrate in the status quo like in any other company. Your success will depend on who you make friends with and who you rub the wrong way. So if you consider the studio with a desire to improve things, have autonomy/liberty of action and no politics you might want to pass. Riot has become a place where you "align" or else. Different view points are not welcome. If you're an introvert you might want to pass too as Riot culture promotes assertiveness and scores low on respect of different view points, thoughtfulness and collaboration. The assertive ones win the arguments, not the best idea providers nor the data gatherers. This leads to teams spinning their wheels a lot, with the worst cases being not shipping anything in years...Teams also don't like to depend on each other and rather than fix their communication, they think the solution is to be totally independent from one another which emphasizes frictions. This is quite telling on the organizational issues at hand. Prepare for some pains in getting teams to communicate or work effectively with others to get things done. I would also not recommend if you're a female unless you're happy to take a passive role, take notes and say yes all the time. You're there to be of service, not to have opinions. While the guys can disagree to the point of screaming at each other , you'll be seen as negative and difficult if you fight for your ideas. Beware what people say. Though Riot promotes direct feedback, it's very hard to get honest feedback from people. If you see your manager acting weird there's probably some feedback they're not sharing. Make sure you can trust the people you interact with if you have constructive feedback on the company, as saying anything constructive can easily be perceived as negativity. For those of you confused by the fact that I said Riot promotes fitting in but at the same time the assertive ones win, welcome to what reviewers call "ambiguity". You'll have plenty of situations like this at Riot, making it very difficult to assess the right course of action. You'll be told to give your opinions but then your managers will be annoyed because you disagreed with them. You'll be told to take initiative but then your managers and others will be annoyed you didn't ask permission first etc...As a manager I consider clarity to be a key part of my role in getting great performance from my teams so that didn't work for me. Figuring out what the true Riot culture is usually takes people a full year. That's no joke. I asked around because I couldn't believe what i was seeing and most of the people I talked to said they struggled here their full first year and some are still struggling to this day because they cannot do anything about the politics which make getting results difficult, and are still pressured to bring results by those same people blocking them. That's only something that can be fixed from the top...

2.0
Nov 12, 2013

Don't work here if you want to progress in your career.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

"Fun" environment, where people get to shoot each other with nerf guns, you get to play the game and see new items before they are release, and a bunch of company perks. Direct peers are super nice, although there can be some negative/draining people there.

Cons

I'd have to write a book about all of the things Riot Games does wrong in running a company. Here's I'll just list a few to help you determine whether Riot Games is right for you. When I first started at Riot Games, I was like awesome, a game company. After about three months, I would ask myself "why are they running the company this way? Don't they realize people aren't happy with doing it this way?" I would bring my voice to upper management--because Riot Games prides themselves on open communication--and management would say "We don't follow conventions. We like to consider ourselves unique." Ok, I get it. They don't want to run a "corporate" environment, but when the company gets to the size they are (>3000 ppl world wide) there needs to be some sort of standard and compromise for growth and communication. As time went on, I would no longer see people that I would normally see. I found out they were "let go", but no one could give me an explaination of why. Shaddy if you ask me. So, if you want to work here...be prepared to come in late (11AM) and stay late (past 8PM). If not, you will be considered part of the "out crowd". It's true, Riot Games is very frat like. If you're not in the "boys club" you're not going to make it. You have to be a bro, do all the bro things, and make Riot Games your life. I don't recommend working at Riot Games unless you are new to the corporate world, meaning you don't have any prior corporate experience. Because if you do, you'll be highly dissappointed and frustrated with how management works, or doesn't work actually. Maybe you can join for a year, just to get them on your resume. You might survive. If you love the game, great. Don't make the game your life. Continue to play the game, which is fantastic, but don't make it your life. Oh, and if you're trying to move up in a company, it's not going to happen at Riot Games unless you come in as a manager.

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