Microsoft Activision deal: New Zealand greenlights the acquisition
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Microsoft Activision deal justย hit the green light in New Zealand. The country’s Commerce Commission (CC) said in a statement that it was satisfied that the merger was unlikely to substantially lessen competition in any New Zealand market.
The Commission said that it had considered the importance of Activision games to New Zealand gamers, and whether Microsoft would be likely to stop rivals like Sony and NVIDIA from offering those games on consoles and cloud platforms.
“With todayโs approval from New Zealand, weโre cleared to move forward with our acquisition of Activision Blizzard in 41 countries. We will continue to work to resolve outstanding concerns and bring this deal to a close,” says Brad Smith, Microsoft’s president, onย Twitter.
There have been concerns about whether Microsoft will do it, but the Redmond-based tech giant has inked a few lucrative binding deals for 10 years with a lot of “rival” console makers, includingย Nintendo Switchย and Nvidia for itsย GeForce NOWย cloud gaming service.ย
“While Activision games, in particular Call of Duty, are popular with New Zealand gamers, our enquiries did not find that they are likely to be โmust haveโ in order to compete with Microsoft in New Zealand,” says Commission’s chairman John Small.
Microsoft’s rival in the gaming industry, Sony, argued that the acquisition would mean that Microsoft couldย perform an unhealthy monopolyย in the sector. Though, back in June this year, the bitter battle ended with Sony agreeing to a 10-year deal with Microsoft to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation consoles.
In other news, Call of Duty’s latest entry in the rebooted Modern Warfare series, Modern Warfare III, has just got a release date on November 10 this year.
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