Pros
The people you work with at the ground level are genuinely great for the most part, with strong collaboration and camaraderie despite the broader environment. There will always be a few exceptions, but overall the peer group is a highlight. Employees at HQ get access to a toy discount, which is a nice perk. There’s also something meaningful about working with such iconic, legacy brands. It brings a sense of nostalgia and pride that’s hard to find elsewhere.
Cons
Everyone wants to blame the CEO. And honestly, that’s fair. The approval ratings speak for themselves. The “Playing to Win” narrative sounds great in interviews and LinkedIn posts, but inside the company it feels completely disconnected from reality. The tone at the top is cold, corporate, and out of touch. Forcing employees back into the office while signaling a preference for “younger, smarter talent” sends a pretty clear message about how current employees are viewed. But the real problem isn’t just at the top. It’s the layer right beneath it. Mid-level management is where Hasbro truly breaks down. These are the people employees deal with every day, and too many of them are focused on climbing the ladder instead of supporting their teams. If you challenge ideas, think differently, or don’t fall in line, you’re not seen as valuable. You’re seen as a problem. Conformity wins here, not performance. The culture is driven by politics and cliques. If you’re not in the right circle, you feel it immediately. People operate carefully, constantly reading the room, waiting for the next reorg or layoff to hit. And those layoffs come often. Large ones, smaller ones, ongoing uncertainty. It’s become part of the rhythm of the company. Even the small things that made work more enjoyable have been stripped away over time. Benefits that once signaled trust and flexibility are gone, replaced with tighter control and less transparency. What’s most frustrating is that managers should be clearing the path for their teams. Instead, many are creating more obstacles. Progress slows, morale drops, and people burn out. So people are leaving. Not because they have to, but because they want to. Talented, capable employees are walking away from a culture that doesn’t support them. If you’re a high performer looking to do great work and be recognized for it, this is probably not the place. Success here often depends more on fitting in than standing out. And for anyone considering joining because they think they’ll be part of that “younger, smarter talent” wave, it’s worth taking a hard look before making the jump. The company doesn’t just need change at the top. It needs a serious reset in the middle.