Former PlayStation boss Shawn Layden says he sees "consolidation to be the enemy of creativity," as the company's outgoing boss Jim Ryan shares his enthusiasm for Microsoft's Call of Duty deal with PlayStation.
In the run-up to Microsoft's $69 billion takeover of Activision Blizzard and, with it, the Call of Duty franchise, Sony was, as you might expect, more than a little vocal about the deal being bad for business. But PlayStation boss Jim Ryan, who's retiring this month after 30 years with Sony, says he's "thrilled" to have secured a deal that will see Call of Duty released on PlayStation systems for the next 10 years.
"The reason that we felt this one was different to anything that had happened in the past was the sheer size and importance of the Call of Duty franchise," Ryan tells CNBC, asked what made the Activision deal uniquely damaging. "So we were absolutely thrilled to be able to negotiate a deal with Microsoft to ensure that that franchise remains available on PlayStation platforms for the next ten years. And that was very important to us, and we're very happy to have done that deal."
Playstation Jim Ryan/Shawn Layden on Microsoft acquiring Activision Blizzard King #Xbox Jim ryan says sony ‘thrilled’ to have Negotiated Call of Duty Deal with MicrosoftShawn Layden says consolidation is the enemy of creativityhttps://t.co/ZaioZRxHS4 pic.twitter.com/CioUyoZpDTMarch 14, 2024
Despite the enthusiasm for it now, Sony initially rejected Microsoft's 10-year Call of Duty deal, something which Ryan was also quizzed on.
"We're at risk of getting granular here," Ryan replies, "but there are deals in deals. And, you know, the deal that was offered at a certain point in time may not have been the deal that was actually signed."
While keeping Call of Duty in the hands of PlayStation fans is certainly something of a win for PlayStation, Layden, formerly CEO of SIE Worldwide Studios, is less than keen on the idea of big companies like Microsoft buying up the competition.
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