The post came across as leaving out some context that wasn't favorable to the poster (which is normal) and I suspect that Glorious Leader touched on at least one of them:
He'd expressed unwillingness to relocate to either of the new offices.
I can't fault someone for not wanting to move, but also can't fault a company with thousands of employees bringing in millions an year deciding to layoff staff unwilling to relocate from an office they're planning to decommission or not renew the lease on. As would be expected, they'd try to time the individual layoffs around their project schedules and well before the office transition so that new staff willing to relocate can be trained up prior to the transition to minimize the negative impacts that come along with office space relocations (I've been through these, they suck no matter how involved in the process the company and management chooses to be.)
It also sounded like he griped about the larger ships, particularly the precious BMM, too much (he couldn't even refrain from doing so in his post.) Considering CIG has stated that the larger/largest ships are intended for large organizations and end-game content, as well are consistent sources of large injections of money, an employee constantly being negative about them, no matter how good they are at doing their job, are eventually going to be removed for one reason or another as they clearly don't want to work on them and just bring down the moral around them for the people that do want to work on them.
All in all, I wish the poster well in their future endeavors but seems to be they just reached the natural end to their time with CIG and now CIG can replace them with someone with more interest in working on the large ships (particularly the spectacular BMM.)
As for the office space, it is not uncommon for tech companies to go a tad overboard with office space design to increase the interest of investors. It doesn't always work out, but isn't uncommon.
The TL/DR for the below rant: Good office chairs are important as bad ones, even if they look cool, can cause damage to the body.
Also, as
@Thalstan pointed out,
GOOD office desks and chairs are VERY important. I remember when a company I was working for decided to take all the good (but most were old) chairs my department had to replace them with these knock-off brand of decent chairs. After a couple months of using the new chairs I developed severe neck pain as well as some nerve issues, after it got so bad it I had to take time off from work to recover I saw a doctor about it, who sent me to Physical Therapy. The Physical Therapist talked to me about my situation and determined it was the chairs having improper support (put pressure on parts of the spine that shouldn't be and no support for parts of the spine that should) causing the issue after I provided pictures of the chairs and me sitting in them. They treated me, gave me exercises for helping my neck recover, and wrote a note for me to bring to HR to explain that if the chair wasn't replaced then the company would be on the hook for the harm caused by it. HR begrudgingly allowed me to go into the new office space being built out as it had both the old good chairs and new better chairs to grab a chair of my choice. Later HR was told to let all existing staff that wanted to replace the chairs they were forced to use to be permitted to replace them with the chairs in the new space. Additionally, HR had gotten into a lot of trouble as they were found to be intentionally mistreating my department (the money they were given to get us new chairs to replace aging chairs was mostly diverted to buying even better chairs for the new space, while buying us cheap knock-off chairs that looked similar to what Senior Management told them to get in the hopes it would go unnoticed) in search of getting hiring bonuses for both replacing us and the hiring the new staff for the new office space. The new office space was for a new contract the company was going for, but by the time everything was settled the company was only partially awarded the contract so the new space went largely unused and to cut costs it the work was eventually sub-contracted to one of the other winners; HR had been very interested in quickly hiring people for those positions as the way the hiring bonuses worked for HR at that time was they received a certain percentage of the new hire's salary as a bonus for hiring new staff that lasted six months and those positions all paid in the six digits annually. After all of that the way bonuses worked for HR was changed, and ultimately they split off a separate department from HR specific for recruitment.