Depends on what you're after - Anonymous employee Dovetail Games Employee Review

4.0
16 July 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Very friendly and positive colleagues across the whole company, feeling like a part of an extended family. It's a very 'local' company with many coming from the area and knowing each other for a long time. The company is giving a lot back to the local area. - Some excellent, friendly and patient managers, ready to teach you anything, and generally positive attitude in the office. Mistakes can be easily forgiven and there is a general 'let's move on' attitude. - Some exceptional individuals on all levels who may seem hard at first but are very genuine once you get to know their quirks. - Lots of seasoned gaming professionals meaning very quick learning for those new to the industry. - Not much pressure for some, enormous pressure for others. Flexitime is generally okay. - Decent size office with good facilities and views, the location in Chatham is utterly terrible but it has some weird nostalgic vibe to it making you want to come back despite its shortcomings. The surrounding area of Kent is ridiculously beautiful. - Two unique franchises to work on, amazing for any rail/fishing fans. - Some social events and parties, although not more than in any other gaming company. - Nice little bonuses like birthday gift cards and occasionally merch. - CEO is indeed an excitable man however he is not very visible, much more visible are other boards members who don't seem trustworthy, can't really put my finger on it but they certainly care about their business way more than they care about the employees.

Cons

- No crunch is a joke, many have to work extra hours, extra hard, with no compensation. I have seen people breaking down during smoking breaks due to lack of compassion from senior management who are overloading junior staff with ridiculous, ever increasing amounts of work. There is no one to complain to (see below). - HR out of touch, they send employee surveys on a weekly basis but never act upon the results, at least not in any meaningful way. HR feels like a wall protecting the business from employees, not the other way around. They only seem friendly, but all their actions are to appease the management. - Pay is not 'competitive', it's below average for the industry with very rare and marginal pay increases, likely to be offered when you've already made a decision to leave. - No benefits: free parking/pantry/non-existent eye care vouchers/pension scheme are not benefits, these are essentials for a 100+ company. There are no benefits, only your wage. - Closed door policy means all decisions are made in a dungeon with no access for regular employees. You will have no steer, and you won't be heard, you can bang on the door with your head as long as you want but they will make all decisions themselves and will never share with you. - Company meetings are great and all but they hand pick comfortable questions and ignore/deflect bad questions, there's some real psychological manipulation / gaslighting going on. - General preference for revenue over quality, although they don't really have much choice.

Explore other reviews about Dovetail Games

1.0
23 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Reasonably flexible hours Understanding when it comes to sickness, appointments and unavoidable circumstances. Remote working. Nice office space and in a picturesque location. Great for train fans and simulation enjoyers. Some nice and talented people 1 or (maybe) 2 company events a year for team build and meetups. A lot of things that can benefit you such as, equipment, peripherals, etc (if you qualify for it)

Cons

Strict guidelines to follow for projects that are incredibly dated, I would expect the imposed guidelines to come from a big company, like Rockstar or EA, not Dovetail. With strict guidelines comes awful cadence for tasks and projects which rival those in the industry for most intense. The studio is incredibly understaffed and the headcount is relatively small per project, so there ends up only being a handful of people developing a title or DLC, the knock on is disconnected people and disjointed departments resulting in silos as well as individuals doing the workload of 2-3 people. The company persists to claim that there is no crunch culture, yet the reality often appears to be the opposite. People will gatekeep and justify high project turnaround as a means to get more money, in turn theoretically giving staff more benefits. However, it's not common to see anyone on the ground get any bonus or benefits for a project performing well. Morale is at an all time low, this is due to many factors. Including, amount of projects, non industry standard commodities, thriving blame culture, pressure for those to deliver even when it is unrealistic. Among others. For some reason, pushing to get anything changed and move things in a positive direction are often met with deflection, complacency and finger pointing. There is nothing bad in wanting a better working environment, however, it seems that somewhere people are trying to sabotage this... There are very few incentives for employees to remain with the company. Opportunities for pay increases, promotions and personal development are practically non-existent, in some cases, stuff like pay only gets affected by minimum wage increases. Ongoing cuts significantly reduced opportunities for career progression and skills development. At the same time, a culture of micromanagement is rampant, Employees are expected to meet targets regardless of whether workloads or deadlines are realistic or achievable. Where meeting goals goes with slogans like, 'we need to pull together' and pulling every trick out of the hat to make you do more than you realistically should. All of which contributed to higher-than-average staff turnover in recent years. A lot of people feeling like they are untouchable, resulting in them being able to push around anyone to get what they want, knowing that nobody else has a say in their decision making. There are people in several departments that use their industry knowledge and/or status/longevity within the company to act righteous and not listen to anybody else. Communication really needs to be worked on at all levels, management seem to find it difficult to motivate, be transparent and lack care, while people at the bottom are left clueless and get blamed for not communicating something that should have effectively come from above. Cross-departmental communication caused disfunction too, where everyone seems to be judging each other's work and a 'better than thou' attitude surfaces every time people wanted to one-up each other rather than focusing on the actual agenda. Attempts to seek clarification frequently resulted in ambiguity. As a result, you were sometimes forced to make a decision based on limited information, Even when answers were provided, they were often vague, dismissive, or lacked the clarity needed to move forward confidently. Why tell people that their experience and input is valuable if you choose to ignore. Company tends to jump on a good idea. The proposal has no forward thinking due to them wanting to expand their IP library. As a result, it gets rushed through approval with no foresight on how to actually plan it, making it go through production hell. Get it green lit, then let dev do everything else, even if there is no vision, planning or direction. It feels if someone does not like you or an inconvenience to them, you will be treated differently. Despite decrying fairness, demanding care from others and equal respect, there seems to be an awful lack of this... When the cameras are on, there is always a veil of positivity, but when the cameras are off and nobody else is around, you will encounter some of the most toxic behaviour, where professionalism gets swapped out for some sort of 'righteous endeavour'. There have been redundancies, where hard working individuals have to deal with the consequences of other people's inaction. 'Trouble makers' or 'problem people' can be kicked, even if there has been no wrong-doing, meaning the company gets to be judge, jury and executioner. Redundancies were coming, we just weren't sure when. The whole process, while seemingly fair on the surface, there didn't really seem to be any rhyme or reason as to who got picked for redundancy, it almost seemed like picking names out of a hat. It felt wrong to give people false hope that there may be a small chance they could keep their job.

1.0
18 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Really nice people across the business. Good hardware and equipment. Remote working. Half day payday. Despite everything, there are some genuinely wonderful people at Dovetail and you'll make some great friends.

Cons

Poor pay compared to the wider industry. Little to no promotion opportunities. Limited career progression. Inconsistent and often ineffective management. Disorganised planning and decision-making. Low morale and declining culture.

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