Microsoft has officially filed its case for its proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard with the European Commission.
In a filing on Friday, the European competition watchdog confirmed it has set a provisional deadline of November 8 to clear the $68.7 billion deal or choose to enter a second, more detailed investigation phase.
Over the coming weeks the European Commission will analyse the deal during what’s called a ‘phase I’ review.
The goal is to decide whether the merger would significantly reduce competition in the market, for example by creating dominant companies that are likely to raise prices for consumers.
If it still has concerns about the deal following its investigation, the Commission will launch a phase II review, which is a more in-depth analysis of the merger’s effects on competition.
According to a Financial Times report this month, regulators and others involved in the Microsoft and Activision merger are expecting a lengthy EU probe.
“It is a big deal, a difficult deal,” a Brussels source said to be familiar with the transaction told the publication. “It needs an extensive investigation.”
The acquisition is being scrutinised by regulators around the world amid antitrust concerns during a time of increasing consolidation in the gaming industry.
Earlier this month the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said its inquiry into the merger had officially been expanded to a second phase due to a number of concerns.
Notably the CMA is worried about the impact the deal could have on PlayStation’s ability to compete, given that it would see Microsoft gain ownership of the Call of Duty series.
Earlier this month, Xbox boss Phil Spencer said Microsoft had committed to making Call of Duty available on PlayStation
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