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The news was announced on Sunday by Microsoft’s gaming head Phil Spencer. “We are pleased to announce that Microsoft and 🫰 PlayStation have signed a binding agreement to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation following the acquisition of Activision Blizzard,” Spencer 🫰 tweeted. “We look forward to a future where players globally have more choice to play their favorite games.”
A Microsoft spokesperson 🫰 subsequently confirmed to The Verge that the deal would last for a term of 10 years, and covers Call of 🫰 Duty only — not any other Activision Blizzard games. That puts it on a par with agreements Microsoft had previously 🫰 signed with Nintendo, Nvidia, and others.
Microsoft president Brad Smith also commented, saying, “From Day One of this acquisition, we’ve been 🫰 committed to addressing the concerns of regulators, platform and game developers, and consumers. Even after we cross the finish line 🫰 for this deal’s approval, we will remain focused on ensuring that Call of Duty remains available on more platforms and 🫰 for more consumers than ever before.”
The signing of the deal marks the end of a long stalemate, during which Microsoft 🫰 made repeated public offers to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation, while Sony dismissed these and instead attempted to use 🫰 its leverage with regulators to sink Microsoft’sR$68.7 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard completely. “I don’t want a new Call of 🫰 Duty deal. I just want to block your merger,” PlayStation boss Jim Ryan reportedly told Activision executives on the day 🫰 of a meeting with European Union regulators in February.
PlayStation’s strategy was to use Call of Duty to convince regulators the 🫰 merger would kill competition in the console market, because Microsoft would withhold the games from PlayStation or release inferior versions 🫰 there. But this strategy was none too successful. EU regulators were satisfied with the assurances offered by Microsoft, while the 🫰 U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority eventually conceded it was in Microsoft’s interest to keep Call of Duty available to PlayStation’s 🫰 huge audience, and switched tack in its opposition of the deal to concerns around cloud gaming.