EA Worldwide Studios is also folding in The Sims and SimCity developer EA Maxis and EA Mobile. Samantha Ryan, who previous ran both studios, is also taking control of Mass Effect developer BioWare. Ryan will report to Patrick Soderlund, formerly of Battlefield studio DICE and head of EA Studios, who will run EA Worldwide as a whole.

Finally, the incredibly impressive Frostbite engine and its tech team will join the company's Technology group. That game engine is well on its way to powering every game EA makes, even sports titles like this year's FIFA 17, in addition to Battlefield 1, the Need for Speed franchise, and Star Wars Battlefront. It appears DICE is no longer directly leading development of the engine it created.

What's important to note is that according to EA, this consolidation apparently won't result in a loss of jobs. If the decision to move all development to a common set of tools -- Frostbite -- is any indication, this should mean better games overall, for everyone. The implications for EA Sports and Plants vs. Zombies studio PopCap aren't clear, but we've reached out for additional information and will update this post should it arrive.

Update: An EA spokesperson tells us that this move will not negatively affect PopCap or the many studios working under the EA Sports label.