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Mark Pincus speaks during the Zynga Unleashed event at the company's headquarters in San Francisco, California June 26, 2012.Stephen Lam/Reuters

The return of Zynga founder Mark Pincus as the digital game maker's CEO is bringing back bad memories about the problems that prompted him to step down as the company's leader nearly two years ago.

Zynga's stock shed 43 cents, or nearly 15 per cent, to $2.47 in Thursday's trading as investors reacted to an abrupt change in command announced late Wednesday.

Don Mattrick, a former Microsoft executive recruited to clean up a mess that Pincus helped create, resigned as CEO, effective immediately. Pincus, Zynga's controlling shareholder, moved back into the CEO job.

With Pincus at the helm, Zynga lost more than $600-million in 2011 and 2012 as once-trendy games like "FarmVille" fell out of favour. The downturn also battered Zynga's stock, pressuring Pincus to get help from a new CEO.

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