Reviewing the arguments being made by Sony I swear they have to be projecting. That feels like the truth of this whole deal, Sony is pissed because they can't do exactly what they're accusing Microsoft of possibly doing. I mean it wouldn't the first time a Japanese video game company has pulled some anti competitive bull, need I cite Nintendo and the whole chip debacle or their licensing scam (and it was a scam, just look at how many crummy games had the Nintendo "seal of quality". it was never about quality but control).
This is literally the dumbest argument imaginable. Simply withstanding that if Microsoft engaged in such activities, they would subject themselves to a class action lawsuit. It doesn't take rocket science to see that this argument is right up there with the most ignorant comments Sony has made. This, and then saying elder 6 WILL be console exclusive when no such announcement has been made (let alone we don't even have any potential release date for it) this is just Sony throwing everything and the kitchen sink hoping something will stick so they can block competition.
This is just Sony making a play to get the precedents to make their own acquisitions. Much easier to acquire something like SE if they can point back to this massive deal. "Since Microsoft bought Activision our revenue has suffered so we need to make this acquisition to remain competetive."
My only concern with this deal is the possibility of Microsoft just in it for cock of duty and candycrush maybe blizzard ip's while the rest of Activisions ip's get tossed in the closet to die.
FUD. That makes literally no sense. The whole point of have a game that proudly displays the Microsoft intro sequence during the start is to promote directly that all other Microsoft games *you* can't play must be great, because this one is also great.
By extension, if this Microsoft game sucks, everything else I'm missing behind the Xbox ecosystem must suck too. FUD I tell you, anyone with a functioning brain can see why the so-called strategy Sony is FUDing makes no effin sense from a business perspective where we have closed ecosystems that rarely get to experience the competitors games.
In new developments to the Microsoft-Activision merger drama, Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) President and CEO Jim Ryan had apparently told the EU antitrust chief that he is no mood for a new Call of Duty deal but wants to block the US$69 billion merger from getting regulatory approval. Despite repeated assurances, Sony does not appear to be convinced by Microsoft's terms and feels that PlayStation gamers will get a sub-par Call of Duty experience should the deal go through.