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Wednesday 26 April 2023 12:33 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 26 April 2023 2:15 pm

Microsoft’s £55bn acquisition of Call of Duty games creator blocked by UK’s competition authority

By: Abby Wallace

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Microsoft announced the deal worth $68.7bn to buy the video gaming company which created the game Call of Duty in January 2022

Microsoft has had its $68.7bn (£55bn) acquisition of Activision Blizzard blocked by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), the regulator confirmed on Wednesday.

The CMA blocked the deal over concerns it would lessen competition in the UK cloud gaming market by giving Microsoft it control over where Activision games are available.

 “Cloud gaming needs a free, competitive market to drive innovation and choice,” a panel chair said.

Microsoft announced the deal to buy the video gaming company, which created the game Call of Duty, in January 2022.

The CMA subsequently announced it would probe the acquisition last September. Microsoft proposed a string of remedies, including reassuring the CMA that popular games like Call of Duty would be available on PlayStation.

The CMA backtracked on its view that the deal would stifle competition in console gaming in March, bringing the companies and regulator closer to a deal.

But the CMA ruled today that Microsoft’s proposals “did not sufficiently cover different cloud gaming service business models,.”

The regulator said that Microsoft would still find it “commercially beneficial” to make Activision games exclusive to its own cloud gaming service.

“We remain fully committed to this acquisition and will appeal,” Microsoft’s vice chair and president, Brad Smith, said in a statement.

“The CMA’s decision rejects a pragmatic path to address competition concerns and discourages technology innovation and investment in the United Kingdom,” Smith added.

“The report’s conclusions are a disservice to UK citizens, who face increasingly dire economic prospects. We will reassess our growth plans for the UK. Global innovators large and small will take note that – despite all its rhetoric – the UK is clearly closed for business,” Activision Blizzard added in a statement.

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