Activision Blizzard boss Bobby Kotick has chastised long term partner Sony for pushing back against the Call of Duty publisher's proposed merger with Microsoft.
In an open letter shared on Substack, Kotick said he remains confident the mammoth $68.7 million deal will ultimately be approved, allowing Activision Blizzard to "compete in the increasingly competitive marketplace that includes rapidly growing, foreign companies that enjoy protection in their home markets."
After positioning Activision Blizzard–which recently delivered annual net bookings of $8.51 billion and saw Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II achieve the highest opening-quarter sell-through in franchise history–as some kind of global pariah, Kotick took aim at Sony.
The long-serving boss–who has been accused of enabling an endemic culture of misconduct during his time at Activision Blizzard–suggested Sony has essentially been crying wolf by sharing illegitimate concerns about the future of Call of Duty on PlayStation platforms, describing the behavior of its platform partner as "disappointing."
"You may have seen statements from Sony, including an argument that if this deal goes through, Microsoft could release deliberately 'buggy' versions of our games on PlayStation," said Kotick, before rubbishing those remarks by claiming Activision Blizzard's "passionate players" would be the first to hold Microsoft accountable should the company renege on its pledge of content and quality parity across platforms.
"Sony has even admitted that they aren't actually concerned about a Call of Duty agreement—they would just like to prevent our merger from happening," added Kotick. "This is obviously disappointing behavior from a partner for almost 30 years, but we will not
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