USA TODAY US Edition

‘Call of Duty: Black Ops 3’ breaks its own rules

- Mike Snider

Just days after gobbling up Candy Crush Saga, video game publisher Activision is ready to release a new installmen­t of a longtime favorite that regularly crushes it: Call of Duty.

The surprises keep coming from the No. 1 U.S. game publisher. Late Monday, Activision Blizzard said it would pay $5.9 billion to acquire mobile game maker King Digital, a move that immediatel­y boosts its fledgling portable game portfolio. Its next surprise: Call of Duty:

Black Ops III, the latest release in the multibilli­on-dollar first-person shooting series, breaks a lot of the rules that it created since 2003 when the initial game launched.

Treyarch, the Activision- owned studio that developed the

Black Ops games, continues the futuristic geopolitic­al saga with this game, set in 2065. Super soldiers have augmented body parts and built-in data jacks to connect to computer networks.

Beyond giving characters new strengths, such as running on walls and hacking robot enemies, the developers wanted to open up the game so players had more choice in how they make their way through the game.

Typically, players must play the story mode solo and in particular order, unlocking the levels or missions consecutiv­ely. But Black

Ops III lets you tackle missions in any order, in part to encourage up to four players joining together for missions.

Players who’ve gotten farther along in the game can share weapons and perks they’ve accumulate­d with others who haven’t made it that far. “We wanted to make sure that players who wanted to play together had that opportunit­y and that the game and the AI (artificial intelligen­ce) would be able to adapt,” studio head Mark Lamia said.

The game ($59.99, out Friday for PlayStatio­n 4 and Xbox One; also on PS3, Xbox 360 and PCs, ages 17-up) is expected to be a hit.

Call of Duty revenue has passed $11 billion, and this new game is the most anticipate­d title of the season, according to Nielsen.

“We have strong momentum,” said Activision Publishing CEO Eric Hirshberg in a conference call with analysts Tuesday about the King acquisitio­n and the company’s third-quarter earnings.

Investors seem to like the onetwo punch as Activision shares closed up 3.3% to $36.99 on Wednesday.

And analysts are bullish on the game’s fortunes. Sales of Call of Duty rose annually until 2012’s

Call of Duty: Ghosts, which was released as Microsoft and Sony brought new game systems to market. “Sales were up again last year, and my bet is that they will be up yet again this year,” said Michael Pachter of equity research firm Wedbush Securities. He expects sales of 18 million copies by year’s end and eventually more than 22 million.

 ?? ACTIVISION/TREYARCH ?? A screen shot from the video game Call of Duty: Black Ops 3.
ACTIVISION/TREYARCH A screen shot from the video game Call of Duty: Black Ops 3.

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