Typical PR bullshit: How Call Of Duty Could Improve If Microsoft Deal Goes Through, According To Activision Boss

Gamernyc78

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28 Jun 2022
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Takes of bs but....


Microsoft is in the process of acquiring Activision Blizzard and all of its studios and franchises, including Call of Duty. If the deal gets done, Activision president Rob Kostich believes the Call of Duty franchise stands to benefit by virtue of being able to leverage Microsoft's vast resources.

"Being able to tap into Microsoft's technology and suite of tools would benefit our teams to create even greater, more immersive experiences for our players," Kostich told Games Beat. "Ultimately, it's about bringing our development team's creative visions to life in this hyper competitive environment

Kostich went on to say that being acquired by Microsoft is an "extraordinary opportunity" for Activision Blizzard. He wouldn't discuss the buyout much further, however, saying, "We still need to allow the regulatory process to run its course."

"As we've said previously, this deal is good for the industry and will bring more games to more players," Kostich explained.

If Microsoft succeeds in clearing the final regulatory hurdles and closing the deal, no one should expect Call of Duty to come to Game Pass right away. In fact, that might not happen until 2025, if it ever does. If Microsoft's deal closes, the Call of Duty series will continue to be released on PlayStation consoles for at least 10 more years.

Activision has Call of Duty's future planned out at least through 2027, and the company has more than 3,000 people working on the franchise.

Microsoft has until October 18 to close its deal to acquire Activision Blizzard. Some believe an official announcement could come down as soon as next week. The UK's Competition & Markets Authority (CMA) recently gave preliminary approval for the deal to move forward, saying Microsoft's sale of cloud gaming rights to Ubisoft "substantially addresses previous concerns and opens the door to the deal being cleared."

Microsoft is set to pay $95 per share to acquire Activision Blizzard for a purchase price of $68.7 billion. This would be Microsoft's biggest acquisition ever and the largest of all time by purchase price in the video game sector. Microsoft originally announced its intentions to buy Activision Blizzard in January 2022, so this has been brewing for more than 20 months.
 

ChorizoPicozo

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is not typical PR Bullshit. Bobby has shown to be a very honest and a force of good for this industry and consumers around the world, only matched by an equally benevolent being in Phil Spencer. Phil and Bobby will join forces to save gaming and spread the delightful joy of videogames, it doesn't matter what it takes, and it doesn't matter if they destroy the industry; PEOPLE SHOULD HAVE ACCESS TO GAMES as cheap as possible and on any device they choose to play.

The Future is bright and green.
 
27 Jun 2023
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But yet they're still making crossgen call of dutys , this latest one is one of the laziest yet with all maps that are just rehashed from the original modern warfare 2 (& shoudve been in last year's MW2 as free updates seen as the post launch support was laughably bad) & Microsoft is signing contracts with Nintendo to promise future cods will be on their underpowered hardware 🤣🤣🤣🤣
 
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Bryank75

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Absolute bullshit, Xbox have all the tools and their games are shit... they have the tech and everything they make is trash and unfinished.

Forza today for instance, many reviews saying it has barely any content.
 

flaccidsnake

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It already seems like a logistical nightmare coordinating Call of Duty between 4 teams. I don't see Xbox's publishing culture assimilating it. Their comfort zone is to have one team overseeing a franchise.
 

On Demand

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EU needs to come in with a new regulatory review.

Deal would officially be over then.