Activision Blizzard had argued to prevent it

QA testers at Blizzard Albany have won the right to vote on whether to form a union. The decision comes after arguments were made to the US National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). The employees, organising under the name GWA Albany,tweetedthat the vote would take place a month from today.

“We are thrilled to announce that the NLRB ruled in our favor to have an election of Albany QA testers at Blizzard. With 94% committed to winning the union, we look forward to counting ballots a month from today,” says the tweet.

21 quality assurance employees at Blizzard Albany - formerly known as Vicarious Visions - will have a right to vote in the union election.

Parent company Activision Blizzard had argued that all 88 Blizzard Albany employees should get to vote on the union. This isthe same argument Activision Blizzard deployed unsuccessfully earlier this yearwhen Raven Software’s QA testers were similarly fighting to form a union. Including more employees in the voting process, including those employees who would not be a member of and therefore would not benefit from the union, would in theory decrease the chance of the vote being successful.

We are thrilled to announce that the NLRB ruled in our favor to have an election of Albany QA testers at Blizzard. With 94% committed to winning the union, we look forward to counting ballots a month from today!#1u#UnionYes

Bloomberg reportthat Activision Blizzard also argued that QA testers who work on different games should not be in the same union. Of Blizzard Albany’s testers, five work on Diablo 2 Resurrection, 15 work onDiablo 4, and one works on World Of Warcraft. The NLRB rejected this argument.

Raven Software’s QA staff likewisewon their fightto vote for their own union, and the vote wassuccessful the following month.

Microsoft are currently in the process of trying to buy Activision Blizzard for $69 billion. Microsoft have saidthey won’t block the resultsof employees' unionisation efforts within the publisher.