After Bobby Kotick tries to scare them off, UK regulators say they’ll oppose Activision Blizzard deal

Activision Games office.


Yesterday Bobby Kotick gave a pair of interviews to CNBC and The Financial Times, during which Activision Blizzard’s longtime CEO was typically bullish about Microsoft’s proposed $68.7 billion acquisition of the publisher (opens in new tab). Kotick pointed at comments from UK prime minister Rishi Sunak about the UK becoming “the Silicon Valley of Europe,” and warned that “if deals like this can’t get through, [the UK’s] not going to be Silicon Valley, [it’ll] be Death Valley”. Then he said the UK’s regulator “lacked independent thought”.

Well, that’s nice. In a piece of perfect timing, the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has today issued its findings (opens in new tab) after a preliminary investigation of the deal, and it looks likely to recommend further scrutiny. Its biggest issues are that it reckons the merger would make Microsoft big enough in cloud gaming that it would stifle competition, harm consumers by weakening the rivalry between PlayStation and Xbox, and potentially “result in higher prices, fewer choices, or less innovation for UK gamers.”



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