Microsoft

EU regulators quiz rivals on Microsoft tactics after Activision

Reuters

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EU regulators quiz rivals on Microsoft tactics after Activision

ACQUISITION. The Microsoft logo is seen on a smartphone placed on displayed Activision Blizzard's games characters in this illustration taken January 18, 2022.

Dado Ruvic/Reuters

The European Union's antitrust watchdog asks game developers and distributors if they think Microsoft will block access to Activision Blizzard games once it's bought the company

BRUSSELS, Belgium – EU antitrust regulators have asked game developers and distributors if they think Microsoft will block their access to Activision Blizzard’s games once it has bought the company, an EU document seen by Reuters shows.

The US software giant and Xbox maker announced the $69 billion deal in January to help it compete better with leaders Tencent and Sony but has run into regulatory headwinds in the European Union, Britain, and the United States.

The European Commission sent a 91-page questionnaire earlier this month, with recipients likely to be gaming companies, including console providers, game publishers, developers and distributors, and providers of PC operating systems, a person familiar with the matter said.

“Please specify which partial exclusivity strategy or strategies you believe Microsoft would have the ability to deploy with respect to Activision Blizzard’s console games after Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard,” the questionnaire asked.

The EU antitrust watchdog asked if such strategies would include degrading the quality or interoperability of Activision’s games available on competing consoles or providing upgrades to Activision’s games only on Xbox.

Other options were raising the wholesale price of Activision’s games for distribution on competing consoles and making them available on competing consoles at a later date.

Companies were also asked if Microsoft would make some of Activision’s gaming content and features exclusively available only on Xbox but not on competing consoles.

The document also included a question about Activision’s Call of Duty, asking which video game franchise is considered the most important for a console game distributor to offer and what other main alternatives there are to Call of Duty.

Regulators asked what advantages and disadvantages game developers and publishers and console game distributors would face if a game is distributed exclusively on one console.

They also wanted to know the impact for competition between cloud game streaming services if the combined Activision portfolio were to become available as part of such a service.

Rival providers of PC operating systems were asked if Microsoft would have the technical ability to prevent Activision’s games from being compatible with non-Windows operating systems.

The Commission gave a deadline of shortly before Christmas for responses. – Rappler.com

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