**Hello, and welcome to Protocol Entertainment your guide to the business of the gaming and media industries. This Friday, weâre taking a look at Microsoft and Sonyâs increasingly bitter feud over Call of Duty and whether U.K. regulators are leaning toward torpedoing the Activision Blizzard deal
Call of Duty is starting to sink the Activision ship
For Microsoftâs Activision Blizzard acquisition, the fate of Call of Duty is starting to look less like a bargaining chip and more like a deal breaker. On Wednesday, the U.K.âs Competition and Markets Authority, one of three pivotal regulatory bodies arguably in a position to sink the acquisition, published a 76-page report detailing its review findings and justifying its decision last month to move its investigation into a more in-depth second phase
Microsoft hit back â hard â and accused the CMA of parroting the talking points of its prime competitor, Sony. But the Xbox maker has exhausted the number of different ways it has already promised to play nice with PlayStation, especially with regards to the exclusivity of future Call of Duty titles. Unless Microsoft is able to satisfy Sonyâs aggressive demands and appease the CMA, it now looks like the U.K. has the power to doom this deal like it did Metaâs acquisition of Giphy
**The CMA is focusing on three key areas the console market, the game subscription market, and the cloud gaming market. The regulatorâs report, which it delivered to Microsoft last month but only just made public, goes into detail about each one, and how games as large and influential as Call of Duty may give Microsoft an unfair advantage
- âThe CMA is concerned that having full control over this powerful catalogue, especially in light of Microsoftâs already strong position in gaming consoles, operating systems, and cloud infrastructure, could result in Microsoft harming consumers by impairing Sonyâs â Microsoft's closest gaming rival â ability to compete,â the report said
- The CMA said itâs also concerned about âother existing rivals and potential new entrants who could otherwise bring healthy competition through innovative multi-game subscriptions and cloud gaming services.â
- âThe CMA recognises that ABKâs newest games are not currently available on any subscription service on the day of release but considers that this may change as subscription services continue toaccording to the report. âAfter the Merger, Microsoft would gain control of this important input and could use it to harm the competitiveness of its rivals.â
- In other words, if Microsoft owned Call of Duty and other Activision franchises, the CMA argues the company could use those products to siphon away PlayStation owners to the Xbox ecosystem by making them available on Game Pass, which at $10 to $15 a month can be more attractive than paying $60 to $70 to own a game outright
- The CMA argued that Microsoft could also encourage players to play Activision games on Xbox devices, even if they were available on both platforms, through perks and other giveaways, like early access to multiplayer betas or unique bundles of in-game items
**Microsoft responded with a stunning accusation In a formal response, Microsoft accused the CMA of adopting âSonyâs complaints without considering the potential harm to consumers.â
- The CMA âincorrectly relies on self-serving statements by Sony, which significantly exaggerate the importance of Call of Duty,â Microsoft said. The company also accused the CMA of adopting positions laid out by Sony without the âappropriate level of critical review.â
- Microsoft reiterated many of the points itâs made since the deal was announced in January, including its commitment to release Call of Duty games on PlayStation for âseveral more yearsâ beyond Activisionâs existing agreements, a concession PlayStation chief Jim Ryan said last month was âinadequate.â
- In its statement, Microsoft said taking Call of Duty away from PlayStation players would âtarnish both the Call of Duty and Xbox brands,â and implied that Sony, as market leader, does not need the franchise to continue dominating the console space
- âThe suggestion that the incumbent market leader, with clear and enduring market power, could be foreclosed by the third largest provider as a result of losing access to one title is not credible,â Microsoft said. âWhile Sony may not welcome increased competition, it has the ability to adapt and compete.â
- Microsoft also went to great lengths to play down its position in the gaming market, a tactic that while strategically necessary does also feel dishonest
- Microsoft said it was in âlast placeâ in the console race, âseventh placeâ in the PC market, and ânowhereâ in mobile game distribution
- In August, Microsoft said pulling Call of Duty from PlayStation would be unprofitable, and in this recent filing it claimed that Sony would still have a larger install base than Xbox if every single Call of Duty player on PlayStation switched to Microsoftâs ecosystem
- In a secondary issues statement released Friday, the CMA responded to some of Microsoftâs complaints and said the company was not fairly representing the incentives it might have to use the deal to âforecloseâ Sonyâs ability to compete
**Sony is playing a savvy, but disingenuous, game. **The PlayStation maker has come out against the deal to the CMA and other regulators around the world, but in many ways the tactics it says it fears Microsoft may employ if it owns Activision Blizzard are the very same tactics Sony has relied on for many years
- Sonyâs leading market position is due in part to the companyâs first-party studios, many of which it acquired, and the exclusive games they produce
- Sony also has for years paid Activision Blizzard for exclusivity rights to certain elements of yearly Call of Duty games (like early access to betas); thatâs the very same contractual agreement Microsoft said it will honor if the deal goes through
- Yet at the same time, Sony is telling the CMA it fears Microsoft might entice players away from PlayStation using similar tactics. âAccording to SIE, gamers may expect that CoD on Xbox will include extra content and enhanced interoperability with the console hardware, in addition to any benefits from membership in [Xbox Game Pass the CMA report said. âSIE submitted that these factors are likely to influence gamersâ choice of console.â
- Sony, of course, has reason to be worried. Call of Duty is a major revenue-driver on PlayStation because of the consoleâs large install base of more than 150 million units
- But beyond that, Microsoftâs strategy of acquiring studios, putting more games on its subscription platform, and supporting game streaming is undermining Sonyâs business model. It may also be true that Microsoft is simply so big and its pockets so deep that itâs the only company that can afford this strategy
- Sony has begun to respond to the changing market, but slowly and often half-heartedly. Many of the Xbox ecosystemâs most attractive features â like being able to buy a game on Xbox and play it on PC, or streaming Game Pass games to multiple screens â are nonexistent in the PlayStation ecosystem, and Sony has made clear it has no desire to change that
- Sonyâs position on some of these policies, and its feet-dragging response to subscription and cloud gaming and cross-platform play, suggests to me it would rather regulators stop Microsoftâs advances than have to defend its own platform through competition
**Picking sides in this increasingly bitter feud** is no easy task. Microsoft does indeed offer platform perks Sony does not, and we can imagine those perks extending to players of Activision Blizzard games if the deal goes through
But Microsoft is also one of the worldâs largest corporations, and praising such colossal industry consolidation doesnât feel quite like the long-term consumer benefit Microsoft is making it out to be. Itâs also worth considering how much better off the industry might be if Microsoft is forced to make serious concessions to get the deal passed. On the other hand, Sonyâs fixation on Call of Duty is starting to look more and more like a greedy, desperate death grip on a decaying business model, a status quo Sony feels entitled to clinging to
âShould any consumers decide to switch from a gaming platform that does not give them a choice as to how to pay for new games (PlayStation) to one that does (Xbox Microsoft wrote. âThen that is the sort of consumer switching behavior that the CMA should consider welfare enhancing and indeed encourage.â The Activision Blizzard deal now depends on how convincing that argument is
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