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FTC: Xbox-exclusive Starfield is “powerful evidence” against Activision deal
Enlarge/ The fact that Starfield won’t be on PlayStation means Microsoft could conceivably make the same decision for Call of Duty, the FTC argues.
For months now, Microsoft has sworn up and down that it has no interest in making Call of Duty exclusive to the Xbox if and when its proposed $69 billion Activision acquisition is approved. But as the FTC’s request for an injunction stopping that acquisition heads toward opening arguments this week, the federal regulator cites one piece of what it calls “powerful evidence” that it can’t trust Microsoft’s assurances. In short, as the FTC puts it, “Microsoft’s actions following its 2021 acquisition of ZeniMax speak louder than Defendants’ words.”
Ahead of the Activision deal closing, Microsoft has made much stronger commitments as far as keeping Call of Duty a multi-platform franchise. Taking Call of Duty off of PlayStation would be nonsensical, Microsoft says in a recent legal filing. The franchise is “profitable precisely because [it] generate[s] sales on many different platforms,” and the deal as structured can’t be profitable for Microsoft without those PlayStation Call of Duty revenues, the company writes. Making Call of Duty exclusive would make for “a worse game and enrage the gaming community, because much of the game’s popularity stems from the way it brings together players who use competing consoles,” Microsoft writes.