Skip to main content

Filed under:

Microsoft and Activision Blizzard: the latest news on the acquisition

Microsoft has closed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion, a deal that makes Microsoft one of the biggest gaming companies in the world. Now, popular gaming franchises like Call of Duty, Warcraft, Overwatch, and more are in the fold of Microsoft’s ever-expanding portfolio of studios, alongside Bethesda and its own Xbox Game Studios.

Also included as part of the deal is King, the maker of Candy Crush, signaling that Microsoft may utilize the company to compete in the mobile space. In early 2021, Take-Two Interactive (which houses developers like 2K, Private Division, and Rockstar Games) purchased Zynga for $12.7 billion.

The deal’s closing was delayed as regulators worldwide raised issues with Microsoft bringing such a large company in-house. However, after a judge denied the FTC’s attempt to block the deal and Microsoft cut a deal allowing Ubisoft a perpetual cloud streaming license for Activision games, it has received the necessary approvals in the US, UK, and other countries.

The acquisition was announced after several high-profile claims of sexual harassment were levied against Activision Blizzard, and in July 2021, the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) sued Activision Blizzard for promoting a culture of “constant sexual harassment.” Activision CEO Bobby Kotick announced he will remain in place through the end of 2023 to assist Phil Spencer with the transition.

We’ll be keeping you updated with the latest news on the big acquisition here, with reports that interrogate how the gaming world might change (in good ways and in bad ways) now that one of the largest third-party game studios is under Microsoft’s ownership.

  • Microsoft says Activision was already planning ‘significant’ layoffs.

    Microsoft has responded to the FTC’s claims that Microsoft laying off 1,900 Activision Blizzard and Xbox employees runs counter to its representations in court. “Activision was already planning on eliminating a significant number of jobs while still operating as an independent company,” says Microsoft lawyers in a new filing today. The FTC is still appealing a district court’s decision not to block Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard acquisition.

    Here’s Microsoft spokesperson Becca Dougherty on the FTC’s filing:

    In continuing its opposition to the deal, the FTC ignores the reality that the deal itself has substantially changed. Since the FTC lost in court last July, Microsoft was required by the UK competition authority to restructure the acquisition globally and therefore did not acquire the cloud streaming rights to Activision Blizzard games in the United States. Additionally, Sony and Microsoft signed a binding agreement to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation on even better terms than Sony had before.


  • Microsoft’s recent layoffs contradict what the company promised of its merger, the FTC says.

    The Federal Trade Commission complained to a federal appeals court on Wednesday that Microsoft’s layoff of 1,900 employees in its video games division went against its representations in court as it fought to acquire Activision Blizzard.

    The move undermines Microsoft’s claims that the companies would continue to operate independently, the FTC said, and will make it harder to get “effective relief” if the agency succeeds in its administrative proceeding.


  • Ubisoft renamed its subscription service and added a new one focused on classics

    Ubisoft

    Ubisoft has renamed its monthly subscription service Ubisoft Plus and is combining the old pricing tiers (Multi-Access and PC Access) into one package dubbed Ubisoft Plus Premium. The new plan will allow players to play games on Xbox, PC, and Amazon Luna and is priced at $17.99. 

    Premium members will get day one (and occasionally early) access to new releases, as well as their pick of premium editions, DLC, and monthly awards. If you already subscribe to PC Access, you’ll keep your plan as is, and you can continue to pay the old monthly fee of $14.99. 

    Read Article >
  • Microsoft now says the CMA was ‘tough and fair’ over Activision Blizzard deal

    Microsoft Corp. President Brad Smith News Conference Following EU Hearing
    Image: Getty Images

    Microsoft president Brad Smith wasn’t happy with the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) last year after the regulator blocked Microsoft’s giant Activision Blizzard deal. Now that Microsoft has restructured its deal and won approval in the UK, Smith has kinder words for the CMA, describing the regulator as “tough and fair” in an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today program.

    Smith originally criticized the CMA and said confidence in the UK had been “severely shaken” after the regulator moved to block Microsoft’s $68.7 billion deal in April last year. He called it the “darkest day” for Microsoft in its four decades of working in Britain and went a step further, saying “the European Union is a more attractive place to start a business” than the UK.

    Read Article >
  • Ash Parrish

    Dec 20, 2023

    Ash Parrish

    The Great Christmas Corporate Shuffle.

    There’s a great corporate shuffling going on at Microsoft today. Matt Booty, Microsoft’s president of game content and studios, sent a memo to employees announcing that Jill Braff would be the new head of its ZeniMax and Bethesda studios.

    Read it in full in our updated story about other changes at Xbox.


  • Dec 20, 2023

    Tom Warren and Ash Parrish

    Microsoft announces more Xbox leadership changes as Activision’s Bobby Kotick departs

    Xbox logo illustration
    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick is stepping down officially December 29th. Microsoft has not appointed a direct replacement and instead has rolled the suite of Activision Blizzard executives — including Blizzard president Mike Ybarra, Activision publishing president Rob Kostich, and Activision Blizzard vice chair Thomas Tippl — under Microsoft’s game content and studios president Matt Booty.

    Kotick’s departure comes just two months after some big Xbox leadership changes that saw Sarah Bond promoted to Xbox president, leading all Xbox platform and hardware work, and Matt Booty promoted to president of game content and studios, including overseeing Bethesda and ZeniMax studios. Now Booty is getting even more responsibilities with Bethesda, Activision Blizzard, and Xbox Game Studios all under his watch.

    Read Article >
  • Jay Peters

    Dec 16, 2023

    Jay Peters

    California settles Activision Blizzard gender discrimination lawsuit for $54 million

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    A California regulator has settled its blockbuster lawsuit that alleged a culture of sexual harassment at Activision Blizzard. Now under the ownership of Microsoft, the gaming company will pay about $54 million as part of the settlement, according to a press release from California’s Civil Rights Department (CRD).

    The CRD (formerly known as the Department of Fair Employment and Housing or DFEH) filed this lawsuit in July 2021, alleging that Activision Blizzard had a “frat boy” culture where women were subject to sexual harassment and gender-based discrimination. Following the suit, employees walked out, executives including then-Blizzard president J. Allen Brack and Blizzard’s former SVP of HR left the company, and, months later, The Wall Street Journal reported that CEO Bobby Kotick had known of sexual misconduct allegations for years.

    Read Article >
  • Sean Hollister

    Oct 13, 2023

    Sean Hollister

    Bobby Kotick will apparently leave Microsoft to focus on philanthropy.

    We knew the Activision Blizzard King CEO would stick around through the end of the year, but it seems he’s done after that.

    He told Bloomberg he wants to focus on philanthropy, help reform education, and is thinking about how to “reduce hatred and intolerance in the world.”

    In 2021, a bombshell report at the WSJ alleged Kotick was personally part of ABK’s sexual misconduct problem. Last year, he donated to a 2020 election protestor.


  • Tom Warren

    Oct 13, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Ubisoft and Activision Blizzard’s deal for cloud gaming rights, explained

    The logo of Ubisoft at Gamescom
    Photo by Rolf Vennenbernd / picture alliance via Getty Images

    Microsoft’s giant Activision Blizzard deal is complete, and it means Ubisoft has now obtained cloud streaming rights for Call of Duty, all other current Activision Blizzard games, and any coming over the next 15 years. It was a key concession from Microsoft that helped get the deal over the line with UK regulators. But what does it all mean?

    Ubisoft will now control where Call of Duty and other Activision Blizzard games show up on cloud gaming services, with the exception of EU countries and the various cloud gaming deals Microsoft signed previously. If you live in a country that’s part of the European Economic Area (EEA) — which includes EU countries and also Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway — then you’ll get a free license to stream via “any cloud game streaming services of their choice” all current and future Activision Blizzard PC and console games that you have purchased.

    Read Article >
  • Ash Parrish

    Oct 13, 2023

    Ash Parrish

    Bobby Kotick will stay at Activision Blizzard until the end of this year

    Microsoft CEO To Defend $69 Billion Deal In Fight With FTC

    Now that the Microsoft acquisition is complete, Bobby Kotick, the CEO of Activision Blizzard, is set to leave the company after the end of this year.

    In an email sent to employees and published on Activision Blizzard King’s website, Kotick wrote that he’s excited about the future of the company under the bright green Xbox umbrella. He also wrote that in order to facilitate a smooth transition, he intends to stay on temporarily as CEO of ABK, reporting to the CEO of Microsoft Gaming, Phil Spencer.

    Read Article >
  • Tom Warren

    Oct 13, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Read Xbox chief Phil Spencer’s memo welcoming Activision Blizzard employees to Microsoft

    Illustration of Phil Spencer
    Image: Laura Normand / The Verge

    Microsoft just finalized its giant $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard earlier today. Xbox chief Phil Spencer has now welcomed Activision Blizzard King employees to Xbox in an internal memo to all of Microsoft’s full-time employees today.

    “We couldn’t be more excited that Activision Blizzard employees are our colleagues, co-workers, and teammates,” says Spencer. “Bobby Kotick has agreed to remain in his role through the end of 2023, reporting directly to me, to ensure a smooth and seamless integration. We look forward to working together as a unified team and we will share more updates on our new organizational structure in the coming months.”

    Read Article >
  • Tom Warren

    Oct 13, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Microsoft completes Activision Blizzard acquisition, Call of Duty now part of Xbox

    Microsoft has finalized its $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard, the publisher of Call of DutyWorld of Warcraft, and Diablo. The Verge exclusively reported last week that Microsoft was planning to close today, and now it’s official. The acquisition required 20 months of battles with regulators in the UK and US, but Microsoft has closed its Activision Blizzard deal after defeating the Federal Trade Commission in a US federal court and restructuring the deal to appease the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in the UK.

    “We love gaming. We play games, create games, and know first-hand how much gaming means to all of us as individuals and collectively, as a community. And today, we officially welcome Activision Blizzard and their teams to Xbox,” says Xbox chief Phil Spencer. “As one team, we’ll learn, innovate, and continue to deliver on our promise to bring the joy and community of gaming to more people. We’ll do this in a culture that strives to empower everyone to do their best work, where all people are welcome, and is centered on our ongoing commitment of Gaming for Everyone.”

    Read Article >
  • Tom Warren

    Oct 13, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal approved by UK regulators

    Illustration of the Activision Blizzard logo
    Illustration by William Joel / The Verge

    Microsoft’s $68.7 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard has been approved by UK regulators. The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has concluded that the deal can proceed after Microsoft recently restructured the deal to transfer cloud gaming rights for current and new Activision Blizzard games to Ubisoft. The decision clears the way for the deal to close now that the UK regulator has given the green light.

    “The CMA has decided to give Microsoft Corporation (Microsoft) consent to acquire Activision Blizzard, Inc. (Activision) (the Parties) excluding Activision’s cloud streaming rights outside of the European Economic Area (EEA) (the Merger) subject to the condition that the sale of Activision’s cloud streaming rights completes prior to completion of the Merger,” reads a statement from the CMA.

    Read Article >
  • Jay Peters

    Oct 10, 2023

    Jay Peters

    Playing video games over something like Neuralink? Bobby Kotick thinks it might be something we actually do.

    Windows Central has some details about an all-hands meeting that took place on Tuesday, including some pontificating by Kotick about how a Neuralink-like brain interface could be a future way we interact with video games and hints about some kind of revival for Guitar Hero.

    Since Kotick is expected to depart sometime after Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision closes (which is expected to happen imminently), anything could change about Activision's plans after Microsoft takes over. I’m crossing my fingers that Microsoft does actually bring back Guitar Hero, though.


  • Tom Warren

    Oct 6, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Microsoft eyes closing its giant Activision Blizzard deal next week

    An illustration of the Xbox logo.
    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Microsoft is planning to finalize its $68.7 billion proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard next week. A source familiar with Microsoft’s plans tells The Verge that the company is eyeing up Friday October 13th as the closing date where it announces to the world that the 20-month process to buy Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard is over.

    That date will still depend on the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority though, a regulator that blocked Microsoft’s deal earlier this year. Microsoft recently restructured the deal to transfer cloud gaming rights for current and new Activision Blizzard games to Ubisoft, and the Xbox maker secured preliminary approval from the CMA late last month as a result.

    Read Article >
  • Thomas Ricker

    Sep 22, 2023

    Thomas Ricker

    Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal gets preliminary approval from UK regulator

    Activision Blizzard wordmark over an Xbox logo
    Illustration by William Joel / The Verge

    The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has given preliminary approval for Microsoft to proceed with its $69 billion Activision Blizzard deal. The CMA had originally blocked the acquisition over cloud gaming concerns, but Microsoft recently restructured the deal to transfer cloud gaming rights for current and new Activision Blizzard games to Ubisoft. In a memo to employees (included below), Xbox boss Phil Spencer called it “a positive development and a welcome indicator that our hard work is bringing us closer to our goal.”

    “The CMA considers that the restructured deal makes important changes that substantially address the concerns it set out in relation to the original transaction earlier this year,” the CMA said in a press release, and “opens the door to the deal being cleared.”

    Read Article >
  • Sean Hollister

    Aug 22, 2023

    Sean Hollister

    Linux could (but probably won’t) be a surprise beneficiary of the Microsoft-Activision deal.

    According to the CMA:

    Ubisoft will also be able, for a fee, to require Microsoft to adapt Activision’s titles to operating systems other than Windows, such as Linux, if it decides to use or license out the cloud streaming rights to Activision’s titles to a cloud gaming service that runs a non-Windows operating system.

    This would have been a bigger deal when the Linux-based Google Stadia still existed and Ubisoft wanted it to succeed. Still, could be relevant someday!


  • Tom Warren

    Aug 22, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Microsoft to sell off Activision cloud gaming rights to Ubisoft in bid for UK approval

    Activision Blizzard wordmark over an Xbox logo
    Illustration by William Joel / The Verge

    Microsoft is restructuring its proposed Activision Blizzard deal to transfer cloud gaming rights for current and new Activision Blizzard games to Ubisoft. The transfer of rights is designed to appease regulators in the UK that are concerned about the impact Microsoft’s proposed $68.7 billion deal will have on cloud gaming competition. The restructured deal has triggered a new regulatory investigation in the UK that could last until October 18th.

    “To address the concerns about the impact of the proposed acquisition on cloud game streaming raised by the UK Competition and Markets Authority, we are restructuring the transaction to acquire a narrower set of rights,” says Microsoft president Brad Smith. “This includes executing an agreement effective at the closing of our merger that transfers the cloud streaming rights for all current and new Activision Blizzard PC and console games released over the next 15 years to Ubisoft Entertainment SA, a leading global game publisher. The rights will be in perpetuity.”

    Read Article >
  • Ash Parrish

    Aug 7, 2023

    Ash Parrish

    The latest Call of Duty gets a November release date

    Key art from Modern Warfare II featuring a close up of Simon “Ghost” Riley, a soldier in a tactical skull mask wearing headphones and eyeblack
    Image: Activision

    Surprising absolutely no one, Activision Blizzard has announced the latest Call of Duty game.

    Posts today from developer Sledgehammer Games and the official Call of Duty accounts confirmed Modern Warfare III (not to be confused with 2011’s Modern Warfare 3, of course) will launch on November 10th.

    Read Article >
  • Umar Shakir

    Aug 3, 2023

    Umar Shakir

    The first Bethesda games are arriving on Nvidia’s GeForce Now service

    Wolfenstein: The New Order trailer screen cap from 2013 featuring big robot dudes with singe red eyes wrecking stuff in a rainy dark outdoor setting
    Wolfenstein: The New Order.
    Image: Bethesda

    Bethesda’s popular Doom, Quake, and Wolfenstein games are making their way onto the GeForce Now cloud gaming service this month, Nvidia announced in a blog post. While Nvidia didn’t reveal the specific titles in each franchise (although the post teases an image of Wolfenstein: The New Order), you must have the Ultimate or Priority membership to get access when they drop.

    The new additions are the first Bethesda titles available for streaming on GeForce Now and stem from a 10-year agreement between Nvidia and Microsoft, which owns Bethesda, that brings Xbox PC games onto the platform. Microsoft made the deal as part of its efforts to appease regulators as it moves closer to acquiring Activision Blizzard. The new Bethesda game additions come after the launch of GeForce Now’s new Ultimate tier in January that lets subscribers play games that are remotely rendered on “SuperPOD” servers running RTX 4080-class graphics cards.

    Read Article >
  • Jul 20, 2023

    Tom Warren and Richard Lawler

    FTC withdraws its in-house challenge to Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal

    An illustration of the Xbox logo.
    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is suspending its administrative challenge (PDF) seeking to block Microsoft from buying Activision Blizzard. The FTC had taken a two-pronged approach against the $68.7 billion deal, filing this case last December that was scheduled to go before its own administrative judge on August 2nd.

    The other part was its pursuit of a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction that would have stopped Microsoft closing its deal while the FTC’s administrative process continued. A US federal judge denied the injunction request earlier this month, and an appeals court also turned down its request to put an emergency hold on the deal. The FTC is still appealing the preliminary injunction denial, though.

    Read Article >
  • Tom Warren

    Jul 19, 2023

    Tom Warren

    Microsoft and Activision Blizzard extend merger agreement to October

    Microsoft - Activision Blizzard logos
    Photo by Hakan Nural / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

    Microsoft and Activision Blizzard have agreed to extend their merger agreement pending the outcome of negotiations with UK regulators. Both parties will now have until October 18th to finalize the transaction, after missing yesterday’s original deal deadline.

    “The recent decision in the US and approvals in 40 countries all validate that the deal is good for competition, players, and the future of gaming,” tweeted Lulu Cheng Meservey, Activision Blizzard’s CCO and EVP of corporate affairs. “Given global regulatory approvals and the companies’ confidence that CMA now recognizes there are remedies available to meet their concerns in the UK, the Activision Blizzard and Microsoft boards of directors have authorized the companies not to terminate the deal until after October 18.”

    Read Article >
  • Richard Lawler

    Jul 17, 2023

    Richard Lawler

    Microsoft and Activision might push back their deadline to complete the merger.

    A report from Bloomberg based on unnamed sources says the two companies aren’t likely to make their agreed July 18th deadline to close the deal, but rather than have Microsoft pay the game publisher a $3 billion breakup fee they’ll just extend it and try to get it down a little later.

    As Tom wrote earlier, despite a courtroom win in the US, the UK’s CMA has set August 29th as the target date for its order, making an extension even more likely.


  • Sean Hollister

    Jul 14, 2023

    Sean Hollister

    MicroActiBlizz might divest the UK streaming rights to its games to appease regulators.

    Bloomberg says Microsoft and Activision Blizzard are only “considering giving up” those UK rights, but I suspect it might genuinely work if they do.

    The CMA’s primary remaining objection to the $68.7 billion deal was a fear that Microsoft would make Activision games exclusive to its own cloud gaming service. (There’s a bit more to it, but still.) If Microsoft permanently removed its own ability to do so...


  • Tom Warren

    Jun 12, 2023

    Tom Warren

    FTC files to block Microsoft from buying Activision Blizzard

    An illustration of the Xbox logo.
    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    The Federal Trade Commission is asking for US courts to stop Microsoft from acquiring Activision Blizzard while the government’s bigger case to block the merger plays out. The FTC originally filed a legal challenge to try and block Microsoft’s proposed Activision Blizzard acquisition in December, and now it’s seeking a temporary restraining order and injunction from a US federal district court.

    “Both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction are necessary because Microsoft and Activision have represented that they may consummate the proposed acquisition at any time,” reads the FTC’s complaint.

    Read Article >