Microsoft only cares about mobile gaming WoW is doomed!

So in a recent post we saw that MS really wants to acquire ActiBlizz to help push its presence in the mobile space. They also talked about the games they would add to the Xbox gamepass and WoW wasn’t even listed in that at all.

Gaming for everyone, everywhere: our view on the Activision Blizzard acquisition
Game developers around the world are creating innovative and groundbreaking games. We think that we can do more to bring those experiences to the billions of players everywhere. Our announcement in January that we intend to acquire Activision Blizzard was an important milestone in our journey to do so. Since then, regulators, game developers and players have been asking what the acquisition means for the industry and, most importantly, for players.

While we love consoles, we recognize that they are not the only way that people play games. Today, the largest and fastest growing segment of gaming is mobile platforms. To reach the billions of players where they are and no matter what device they play on, we need to embrace choice. Giving players choice in how they play their games makes gaming more accessible and leads to larger, more vibrant communities of players. Choice is equally important to developers. Developers benefit from having a diversity of distribution and business models for their games. Choice unlocks opportunities for innovation and enables the industry to grow.

We are expanding choice in two ways: through the creation of Game Pass, which gives players a subscription option; and by bringing more games to mobile platforms, including through our cloud game streaming technology. Subscription services like Game Pass make gaming more affordable and help players from all over the world find their next favorite game. Game Pass empowers developers to bring more games to more players, not fewer. We intend to make Activision Blizzard’s much-loved library of games – including Overwatch, Diablo and Call of Duty – available in Game Pass and to grow those gaming communities. By delivering even more value to players, we hope to continue growing Game Pass, extending its appeal to mobile phones and any connected device.

Bringing more games to mobile platforms, however, requires new capabilities. The expertise that the teams at Activision Blizzard bring in developing games for mobile platforms will help us understand how to create games that engage players around the world. In addition, we hope that players will be eager to play traditional console games from Activision Blizzard on other platforms via our cloud game streaming technology. This promises to open up mobile gaming, creating new distribution opportunities for game developers outside of mobile app stores while delivering compelling and immersive experiences for players by using the power of the cloud. And we can extend the joy of playing to devices that people already own, including Smart TVs and laptops.

In doing so, we will pursue a principled path. We’ve heard that this deal might take franchises like Call of Duty away from the places where people currently play them. That’s why, as we’ve said before, we are committed to making the same version of Call of Duty available on PlayStation on the same day the game launches elsewhere. We will continue to enable people to play with each other across platforms and across devices. We know players benefit from this approach because we’ve done it with Minecraft, which continues to be available on multiple platforms and has expanded to even more since Mojang joined Microsoft in 2014. As we extend our gaming storefront across new devices and platforms, we will make sure that we do so in a manner that protects the ability of developers to choose how to distribute their games.

We will continue to engage with regulators with a spirit of transparency and openness as they review this acquisition. We respect and welcome the hard questions that are being asked. The gaming industry today is robust and dynamic. Industry leaders, including Tencent and Sony, continue to expand their deep and extensive libraries of games as well as other entertainment brands and franchises, which are enjoyed by players everywhere. We believe that a thorough review will show that the combination of Microsoft and Activision Blizzard will benefit the industry and players.

For all the players and game developers out there, you remain at the center of everything we do, and we will continue to listen to your feedback and do everything we can to nurture this industry we all love.

Link: https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2022/09/01/gaming-everyone-everywhere

It seems only reasonable that WoW will get far less attention in the future once the acquisition goes through as all the attention will go into the predatory mobile market.

Therefore I think Dragonflight will be the last great expansion we ever get from Blizzard before they turn into MS employees and the old blizzard we’ve come to love is no more.

RIP WoW

1 Like

Is the sky falling? Again?

/yawn

12 Likes

The Microsoft acquisition is only about $$ and pushing products To more customers by cutting costs, making more micro transactions and ”modernizing” franchises to be mobile friendly. I don’t understand why others think one giant corporation buying up developers and game companies would be ultimately good for them.

4 Likes

I mean when a megacorporation buys your favorite dev studio I’d say that isn’t a bad metaphor

Blizzard is dead

1 Like

Why would they put Wow on their pass when they can make more money with the current sub model? I don’t think they added ESO to the pass either did they?

6 Likes

Not surprised. People only got excited about Microsoft because trust in Blizzard had hit basically rock bottom so literally anything different would be a chance for good change.

Seems like the status quo will be maintained for WoW, which makes sense for an almost 20 year old game.

4 Likes

Do you really think they need the pennies that a wow sub makes them with the remaining 500k players WoW has? They just don’t care about WoW at all that’s why.

1 Like

This is blatantly incorrect, Phil Spencer, head of Microsoft, has stated he wants to see more WoW players specifically.
https://www.techtimes.com/articles/271592/20220208/xbox-boss-phil-spencer-more-world-of-warcraft-players-microsoft-activision-blizzard.htm

11 Likes

I don’t think Microsoft is going to interfere with WoW just based on how they’ve interacted with ESO. The only thing that has happened was that they made it so that items in loot boxes has to be available in-game. So that might actually be a good thing in WoW’s case. I wonder if they’ll make cash shop mounts available in-game.

Oh and maybe we might get a Starcraft mobile game so who knows.

1 Like

Citation needed.

3 Likes

Do you… do you not know Blizzard owns Candy Crush?

This isn’t saying Microsoft is gonna ditch WoW. However, Blizzard is a solid player in the mobile market, so the buy is more than one use.

5 Likes

Umm it’s Microsoft. They don’t “need” any of these games money if you want to be technical about it. They make plenty of the computer side of business.

They’re not going to mess with a successful business model.

2 Likes

Yeah and they also own Diablo Immortal and look how terrible that is. It’s horrible they are already turning into an evil lootbox developer.

It’s no wonder MS likes this deal so much.

Who let Chicken Little out of his coop again?

7 Likes

You mean look how profitable it is?

You can’t blame Blizzard for taking advantage of whales who are willing to quite literally spend $100,000 themselves in a month.

Diablo Immortal is also completely easy to play as a free to play player. The Sky is Falling people overreacted like they always do, coming up with absurd 350 year estimates.

Diablo Immortal was also developed independently from Diablo IV, so it’s not like it impacted the main Diablo fans.

4 Likes

Calm down, everyone. Let’s just let OP enjoy his Sunday troll thread.

4 Likes

Goodness sakes Maizou did you also sell your soul to the devil?

You’re just enabling this terrible behavior no wonder blizzard games have gone down the toilet. I mean look at you, someone who represents us, and you’re advocating for terrible and predatory practices.

Yuck

5 Likes

I am on a limited income.

These streamers are literally throwing a decades worth of money I earn at Blizzard in a month.

Blame them. They are the ones that caused them to go the Microtransaction Route.

Blizzard is far from the first company to use microtransactions.

I despise microtransactions, but I also understand why they use them when whales like that exist.

4 Likes

I sold my soul to STEVE.

Sis he’s trolling u :sob: