So seems that with the acquisition:
- PS continues getting CoD
- PS no longer pays CoD marketing
- PS gets a higher revenue share from CoD
- PS gets even the Xbox Studios games on PS
- PS pretty likely will get in cloud gaming the ABK games like CoD via Ubisoft
Ah you guys complained about Jimbo, the acquisition seems more benefitial to PS than to Xbox xDDD
Yup, in fact the gains from this change in the COD contract could make more money than all the pc ports and published games combined.
For instance if Sony made 200 million profit from COD annually previously, now it would be 300 million and no marketing expenses.
Win - win.
Last fiscal year Sony made over $700M with their first party games outside PS (meaning, mostly PC).
The highest CoD yearly revenue number we got was $3B, being over $1B from CoD mobile. So being optimisting in PS it made over $1B, let's say $1.2B as a random guess. 20% (assuming this was the discounted revenue share, not sure if true) of that would be $240M. A 30% of that would be $360M.
Where is this info for curiosity? 30% is what Sony ask to all publishers.
Some platform holders take a lower revenue share from the very top 3rd party publishers. In this case, we know Sony had a discounted % for Activision Blizzard (top #1 publisher in PS). Sony said in court that the discould could dissapear post-acquisition:
Other than this, unless I missed something we don't know which was the discounted % that Activision had at Sony before the acquisition, and if Sony kept the discount for MS or if removed it.
Maybe Jimbo said to Spencer "Do you want to acquire ABK and keep the discount? Only if you port all your previous and future XBO and Xbox Series main ABK, Zenimax and Xbox Studio games to PS before releasing the next generation, and if you also provide us access to the full ABK catalog via cloud gaming via Ubisoft. If you sign this we'll approve the acquisition, and we may negotiate a new discount, not as big as the one ABK had."