Activision looking forward to completion of Microsoft acquisition
Much like a Call of Duty player inching up the stairs behind a wily sniper, Microsoft are closing in on final,finalapproval of their multi-billion purchase of Activision Blizzard, havingmore-or-less won over the UK’s competition and markets authority. The company expect tobring it homeby 13th October.
Activision have poppeda statementon the socials in which they hail the completion of the Acti-Microsoft legal nuptials, while admitting that Modern Warfare 3 andDiablo 4specifically won’t release on Game Pass this year. “As we continue to work toward regulatory approval of the Microsoft deal, we’ve been getting some questions whether our upcoming and recently launched games will be available via Game Pass,” it reads.
“While we do not have plans to put Modern Warfare III or Diablo IV into Game Pass this year, once the deal closes, we expect to start working with Xbox to bring our titles to more players around the world,” the statement continues. “And we anticipate that we would begin adding games into Game Pass sometime in the course of next year.”
Why the wait? Activision aren’t saying, but I imagine it’s to do with existing contractual obligations. The delay may be to Diablo 4’s advantage, where its Game Pass reception is concerned: the game is in a difficult place right now, with Blizzardrecently unveiling a vast platter of quality-of-life adjustmentsto accompany the forthcoming Season of Blood update.
Call of Duty and Diablo aren’t, of course, the only Activision-Blizzard games Microsoft will snaffle during its latest act of Borg-style assimilation. The game that comes immediately to mind for me isStarcraft 2, which sits at number three onthe RPS reader rundown of all-time great strategy gamesand at 12 on our own ‘official’best strategy gamelist.