It's not yet clear what this means for Dreadwolf's development.
"At the end of last year I decided to leave BioWare," wrote Walters, even though"These past 19 years have been a life-changing experience [...] and it made the choice to go very difficult". But he left nevertheless, and his LinkedIn career history now lists him as departing his production director position after exactly one year in the role, from January 2022 to January 2023.
last year, Walters described the production director role like this:"you have the vision for a product you’re helping to uphold [...] but on the producer side, you are also responsible for figuring out how you’re going to support the team in creating that vision". To me, that doesn't sound like the kind of job you can wrap up part way through development and head home, but rather the sort of role that stays necessary until the game hits shelves.
I've reached out to BioWare to seek clarification on what this means for Dragon Age: Dreadwolf, and will update if I hear back.), and with so many years at BioWare, Walters is yet another in a line of studio veterans that have left the company in recent years. 2020 saw the departure of
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