Xbox Boss Commits To Supporting Call Of Duty On PlayStation Forever With One Caveat

Published at: 01/11/2022
Xbox Boss Commits To Supporting Call Of Duty On PlayStation Forever With One Caveat

Promo artwork for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II, Promo artwork for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II, released October 28, 2022 Same Brain Interview with Phil Spencer In recent months the acquisition of Activision-Blizzard by Microsoft has come under significant scrutiny both from regulators and competitors .

The claim is that if Microsoft gains controlling interest in the games developer they could have a near-monopoly in the gaming market, particularly in cloud space.

Additionally, Sony claims that allowing the deal to go through would create a situation where one of the most popular games on any platform, Call of Duty, would gain exclusivity to only Microsoft platforms.

Head of Xbox, Phil Spencer, has stated that Microsoft has no intent on Call of Duty exclusivity, though.

On the Same Brain podcast of popular YouTubers iJustine and Jenna Ezarik, Spencer pointed out that the intent is to proceed in a very similar way that Microsoft has done with their handling of their acquisition of Mojang and Minecraft Spencer goes on to point out that not only has Microsoft not limited the access to Minecraft, overall, it has actually increased the availability of the game on more platforms.

Minecraft now spans so many editions and platforms that the easiest way to describe its reach is to check out this availability matrix "Yeah we're not taking Call of Duty from PlayStation.

That's not our intent, and as long as there is a PlayStation out there to ship to our intent is to continue to ship Call of Duty on PlayStation.

" Spencer said in the interview This statement hopefully quells some fears about the merger, especially when we consider how Bethesda is no longer planning on releasing Starfield for PlayStation 5 following Microsoft's acquisition of its parent company, Zenimax, in 2021.

While that definitely was a sting to PlayStation owners, it's not necessarily as harsh of a sting as if Microsoft were to do something like that with a title that has 19 years of history like Call of Duty.

Source: Hot Hardware