Sony Keeps Hitting Microsoft With The Call Of Duty Stick (And It's Working)

Published at: 24/11/2022
Sony Keeps Hitting Microsoft With The Call Of Duty Stick (And It's Working)

Sony Keeps Hitting Microsoft With The Call Of Duty Stick (And It’s Working) Xbox has endured a bruising fight in front of UK regulators as it attempts to sell its Activision Blizzard mega merger, with main rival PlayStation taking every opportunity to stick the boot in.

There’s a lot to go through from the court documents that found their way online last night, so perhaps its best to start with the least bit of interesting information gleaned: next-gen consoles are still a way off because the current “next-generation” hardware hasn’t really gotten started yet.

Thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic and the various shortages and production delays associated with it, it feels like the era of the PlayStation 5 and the Xbox Series X is still warming up.

However, the Christmas period now approaching at Mach speed will be the third for both consoles.

By this point in the life cycle, we’d usually be getting close to revised models, the first “slim” variants, if you like, the ones that update the hardware a little and come in about a hundred bucks cheaper.

With people still battling to get hold of a PlayStation 5, that era might have to wait a little while longer.

That, of course, is to say nothing of future hardware generations.

Though the bulk of last night’s regulatory documents relate to Microsoft’s giant Activision Blizzard merger, one detail that leapt out was the broad admission from both Sony and Microsoft that neither expects to have next-generation PlayStation or Xbox consoles on the market before 2027 at the very earliest.

As reported by VGC, this all came up because of the CMA’s concerns that the size of Microsoft’s merger could have an impact on Sony’s ability to compete, with specific relevance to — you guessed it — Call of Duty.

Microsoft responded by explaining its view that next-generation consoles are still half a decade away.

“The Parties (meaning Microsoft and Activision) do not dispute that some portion of gamers are likely to re-assess their console ownership at the start of a new generation,” reads Microsoft’s rebuttal wrote.

“But they also note that this is an event that only occurs approximately every eight years.

“Indeed the next new generation of consoles are not expected to be released before the fall of 2028 at the very earliest.

” So file that one away.

Interesting tidbit, and perhaps predictable for anyone keeping score, but it was quickly swept away in the wave of courtroom battery that followed.

Sony has discovered that it can hit Microsoft with the Call of Duty stick any time it wants, and regulators take notice it they does.

Sony continues to argue that the threat of losing Call of Duty to Microsoft under the bounds of exclusivity presents a real and grave danger.

Microsoft continues to argue that its position that making CoD a platform exclusive would not be in any way beneficial to its bottom line, that the franchise is not historically a system-seller, and that it offered Sony a ten-year deal to keep the franchise on PlayStation platforms.

Sony isn’t having a bar of it.

“Microsoft has offered to continue making Activision’s games available on PlayStation only until 2027,” said Sony.

“By the time SIE launched the next generation of its PlayStation console (which is likely to occur around [this bit is redacted]), it would have lost access to Call of Duty and other Activision titles, making it extremely vulnerable to consumer switching and subsequent degradation in its competitiveness. “Even assuming that SIE had the ability and resources to develop a similarly successful franchise to Call of Duty, it would take many, many years and billions of dollars to create a challenger to Call of Duty – and the example of

Source: Kotaku Australia