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XBox (Games) Microsoft Sony Games

Microsoft Offers Sony a 10-Year Deal On New CoD Games, Plans To Raise Game Prices Next Year (theverge.com) 30

In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal today, Microsoft president Brad Smith said the company has offered Sony a 10-year contract to make future Call of Duty games available on PlayStation if its proposed Activision Blizzard acquisition gets approved. Microsoft initially offered to keep the popular game series on PlayStation for three years after the current agreement expires, but that deal was deemed inadequate by Sony's gaming chief Jim Ryan.

"The main supposed potential anticompetitive risk Sony raises is that Microsoft would stop making 'Call of Duty' available on the PlayStation. But that would be economically irrational," Microsoft President Brad Smith said in the WSJ opinion piece.

Microsoft also plans to increase the prices of its upcoming first-party Xbox games next year. The Verge's Tom Warren writes: From 2023 onward, new full-priced games from Xbox Game Studios like Redfall, Starfield, and Forza Motorsport will be priced at $69.99 instead of the usual $59.99. It's a price increase that matches the pricing that competitors like Sony, Ubisoft, and Take-Two all offer their own games at.

Microsoft issued the following statement about the price increases: "We've held on price increases until after the holidays so families can enjoy the gift of gaming. Starting in 2023 our new, built for next-gen, full-priced games, including Forza Motorsport, Redfall, and Starfield, will launch at $69.99 USD on all platforms. This price reflects the content, scale, and technical complexity of these titles. As with all games developed by our teams at Xbox, they will also be available with Game Pass the same day they launch."

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Microsoft Offers Sony a 10-Year Deal On New CoD Games, Plans To Raise Game Prices Next Year

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  • I did, my life has never been better
  • I feel like this has happened before, again.

    • AAA games have no choice than being remakes, repackages and rehashes. You can't risk trying something new when it costs millions to make the game. You have to regurgitate a tried and known-good formula that you know will at least attract enough people to recover your costs.

      • Flashy graphics and celebrity hooks do not a genre make, How much did it cost to develop Doom?
        • How much for Tetris, how much for Minecraft?

          But what would you think would be the reaction if something like Minecraft was produced by EA or UBISoft and sold at full price? When people hear about a publisher bringing out a game, they have expectations. Granted, my expectations when looking at something from EA or UBIsoft are that I have to pay 60 bucks up front, 40 bucks for questionable required content, have to sign up for some proprietary launcher that takes up gigabytes of hard drive real estate and bom

  • I'm not sure what Microsoft is trading here. If the deal doesn't go through COD stays on PlayStation indefinitely. What does Sony gain by approving this?
    • It's not Sony who get to approve/deny this deal; it's the regulators. Sony doesn't have to gain anything. Instead their claims about unfair market domination have to be portrayed as unreasonable.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by luther349 ( 645380 )
      sony is throwing a fit becouse at some point they might lose cod. if a 3rd party title makes or brakes you'r system maybe you should have not bet the entire bank on it.
  • that nobody's concerned with that the US Gov't has to say (and more importantly the anti-trust laws it's people demanded)?

    I kinda like how mask off this all is. Just a reminder that these mega corps are making the rules.

    Doesn't have to be that way. We could take that power back any time we want. But you have to want it. And you have to stop letting people push your buttons.
    • nobody's concerned with that the US Gov't has to say

      What is the US Government saying about this?

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      The exact opposite. These sort of discussions and offers are specifically about Microsoft being very worried that its Activision purchase deal will get vetoed by competition watchdogs. In many countries, not just US.

  • What's that, a recession is coming?

    I know, raise prices!

  • Microsoft doesn't need to lock out Sony. They could just delay Playstation COD release by 3 months. It would infuriate gamers pushing them to MS but still collect any money from stragglers on PS.

    • So uncreative, They could enable cross platform play and then ensure only Xbox live subscribers have access to prioritized networks and premium content.
  • A way around this issue for Microsoft is to depreciate Call of Duty and to make the blockbuster FPS multiplayer game under a different IP, maybe call it 'Medal of Honor' or something.
  • 70 bucks to have the privilege of being paying beta tester lol. SO many buy new releases then cry because of how bad the games bugs are...I wait till they go on sale

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