Xbox boss Phil Spencer has said he intends to talk with Activision’s studios about working on a variety of franchises from its vault, rather than just Call of Duty.
Activision recently transitioned virtually all of its studios to work on Call of Duty, as demands increased following the move into live service with Warzone, plus disruption caused by the pandemic on its annual release schedule.
That means developers such as Toys for Bob, known for Crash Bandicoot 4, are now working on Call of Duty. Even Vicarious Visions, creator of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 and Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy, was recently folded into Blizzard.
Speaking in a new interview with Washington Post following Microsoft’s announcement of its Activision Blizzard acquisition, head of gaming Phil Spencer suggested that he intends to give Activision’s studios more freedom to work on non-CoD projects once the deal completes.
“I was looking at the IP list, I mean, let’s go!” Spencer said. “‘King’s Quest,’ ‘Guitar Hero.’ … I should know this but I think they got ‘HeXen.’”
According to the publication, Spencer said the Xbox team “will talk with developers about working on a variety of franchises” from the Activision Blizzard vaults.
“We’re hoping that we’ll be able to work with them when the deal closes to make sure we have resources to work on franchises that I love from my childhood and that the teams really want to get,” Spencer said. “I’m looking forward to these conversations. I really think it’s about adding resources and increasing capability.”
If the $70 billion deal concludes without any issues, it means Microsoft will become the owner of a number of potentially lucrative video game IPs.
While the obvious examples include Call of Duty and World of
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