Activision Blizzard Cloud Streaming Rights Being Sold To Ubisoft

Expert Verified By

Microsoft Selling Rights After Acquisition!

Microsoft is months away from being the owner of Activision Blizzard and all its iconic gaming IPs. The gaming giant has struggled for over a year in an attempt to convince regulators to approve the transaction.

Among the major regulators, the CMA blocked the deal due to concerns about Microsoft potentially becoming too dominant in the cloud gaming market. However, Microsoft’s latest update has provided a solution to the CMA’s concerns.

Microsoft has announced an agreement to sell off cloud streaming rights for Activision Blizzard titles to Ubisoft.

Why it matters: This would prevent a scenario where Microsoft would be able to control the cloud gaming market due to the influence of Activision Blizzard games.

Microsoft Activision Blizzard Acquisition

Microsoft believes this new agreement leads to a drastically different scenario for the merger than the one blocked by the CMA earlier this year.

Following Ubisoft’s ownership of cloud streaming rights, Microsoft would lose the ability to limit Activision Blizzard games to its own cloud streaming services, addressing the CMA’s concerns.

The Ubisoft Plus subscription will also benefit from the deal, gaining the ability to offer games from Activision’s catalog and potentially bring them to non-Windows-based systems on PC.

Previously, Microsoft agreed to various measures in Europe, leading to approval from the European Commission. These agreements ensured a free license to European consumers to stream Activision games through any cloud streaming service.

Following the deal with Ubisoft, Microsoft will continue to honor its obligations to the European Commission. Therefore, Ubisoft will have exclusive rights to the streaming of Activision games worldwide except in the European Economic Area.

Before the $68.7 billion transaction is approved, the CMA will look through Microsoft’s new terms, but the gaming giant expects a decision will be made before the extended deadline.

Recently, the Activision Blizzard merger was extended to October 18, ensuring plenty of time for all the parties involved to make an informed and thorough decision.

Was our article helpful? 👨‍💻

Thank you! Please share your positive feedback. 🔋

How could we improve this post? Please Help us. 😔

Latest News

Join Our Community

104,000FansLike
32,122FollowersFollow

Trending

Next Xbox Console is Planned to Launch in 2026, It is Claimed

A source has claimed that the next Xbox console is planned to launch in 2026 and Call of Duty will be the day one title.

Assassin’s Creed Shadows Is Being Developed By 16 Ubisoft Studios

Assassin's Creed Shadow has 15 supporting developers, along with one main studio, Ubisoft Quebec, which created Assassin's Creed Odyssey.

Helldivers 2 & Ghost of Tsushima Removed From Unsupported PSN Regions on PC

Following Sony's decision to halt sales of its PC ports in unsupported regions, the Steam page has completely vanished in these countries.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt Was Released 9 Years Ago Today

Nine years ago today, CD Projekt Red launched The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, and the open-world RPG landscape hasn't been the same since.

Stellar Blade Director Denies Claims of Censorship At Launch

Shift Up confirms that Stellar Blade was not censored, and all the changes made to the game were intentional.