Fiji Sun

Microsoft’s Activision takeover approved

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EU regulators have approved Microsoft’s US$69bn (FJ$153bn) attempt to purchase Call of Duty publisher Activision Blizzard.

The European Commission (EC) said Microsoft had addressed their concerns on competitio­n issues.

It comes three weeks after the UK blocked the deal over worries it would hurt competitio­n in the emerging cloud gaming business. The proposed takeover is poised to be the biggest deal in gaming history, but has split global regulators.

In order for the deal to go through Microsoft and Activision need approval from regulatory bodies in the UK, EU and the US.

The US Federal Trace Commis

sion filed a lawsuit in December to block the deal - a judge’s decision is unlikely before the end of the year.

The EC have approved the acquisitio­n, saying that Microsoft’s offer of 10 year free licensing deals - which promise European consumers and cloud game streaming services access to Activision’s PC and console games - mean there would be fair competitio­n in the market.

“The commitment­s fully address the competitio­n concerns identified by the Commission and represent a significan­t improvemen­t for cloud gaming as compared to the current situation,” the EU competitio­n watchdog said in a statement.

It said an in-depth market investigat­ion indicated that Microsoft “would not be able to harm rival consoles and rival multi-game subscripti­on services”.

And it said cloud game streaming service providers “gave positive feedback and showed interest in the licences”, with some having already entered into agreements with Microsoft based on their proposals.

 ?? ?? Microsoft is purchasing the gaming publisher Activision Blizzard.
Microsoft is purchasing the gaming publisher Activision Blizzard.

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