It's not greed. The big publishers have an obligation to their shareholders to make as much money as possible. Sometimes that means layoffs happen, as regrettable as that is.
You're basically arguing that 'corporate greed' is literally not a thing. Ever. In any situation. That literally any practice any business ever does to make more money, no matter how obviously scummy, is not 'greed' and is in fact always justified.
Basically, the term 'greed' shouldn't even exist.
I still think you're missing that the Covid gaming boom was a temporary thing, and was clearly not sustainable. And if they continue to try and chase that level of rapid growth forever, they will sever their own arms and limbs trying to do so. It's complete absurdity. They will be
forced back to normalization whether they like it or not, and any sensible companies will simply absorb the hit and make sure they're as prepared to continue successful operations in the future as possible. But greedy companies will grab the saw and start going at their limb to try and shed weight in a desperate bid to keep the share price growth going, even though they'll realize in due time that they actually need that limb to function in the first place.
It's especially ridiculous because share price doesn't dictate financial health of a company, at least not when we're talking the difference between a
mere healthy stock price and an inflated/ATH one. It's not as if a healthy company being sensible is going to have their stock crash to the bottom. You lose the stock hype and some benefits from that, but it doesn't mean the balance sheet is gonna hurt because of it. Health and sustainability should always be #1 priority, and frankly, anybody who suggests that any healthy company has an obligation to shareholders over their own employees is gonna get a giant middle finger from me.