Sony has leveled criticism towards Microsoft once more, this time because Starfield will be an Xbox-exclusive game. The process, that's verging on becoming a feud, continues in front of the UK's Competition and Markets Authority agency with Sony's latest statement disparaging the decision to release Starfield as an Xbox console exclusive.
Sony has made several statements both in front of the European Commission and the CMA in connection with trying to prove Microsoft can't be trusted with Call of Duty. As of the writing of this article, Microsoft has signed four deals to bring Call of Duty to various different platforms for the next 10 years. The companies in question are Nintendo, Nvidia, Boosteroid, and Ubitus, the last two both being cloud-based gaming providers. The same deal was offered to Sony, but it hasn't accepted it yet. The deals' validity depends entirely on whether Microsoft manages to buy Activision Blizzard. Sony has consistently tried to block this deal with by providing evidence for why it thinks Microsoft will mishandle such a large brand as Call of Duty. The FPS is considered to be one of the biggest pulls for PlayStation players, so Sony understandably fears losing it.
Microsoft Signs Another Cloud Gaming Deal to Convince Regulators
The evidence Sony used to back up its statement was a comment made by Microsoft, saying it would «not have the incentive» to make Starfield an Xbox exclusive. At the same time, Bethesda made no previous commitment with regard to Starfield being released on PlayStation or any other platform since the publisher was purchased by Microsoft. But to Sony, this counts as proof towards the fact Starfield could've been a multi-platform release, therefore Microsoft will go back on its
Read more on gamerant.com