Why Microsoft is splashing $69bn on video video games

Why Microsoft is splashing bn on video video games


Jan 18th 2022

EVEN FOR Microsoft, which boasts a market capitalisation of round $2.3trn, $69bn is some huge cash. On January 18th the agency stated it will pay that sum—all of it in money—for Activision Blizzard, a video-game developer. It is each the largest acquisition ever made within the video-game {industry} and the largest ever made by Microsoft, greater than twice the scale of the agency’s buy in 2016 of LinkedIn, a social community, for $26bn (see chart). The transfer, which caught industry-watchers unexpectedly and propelled Activision Blizzard’s share worth up by 25%, represents an enormous wager on the way forward for leisure. But not, maybe, a loopy one.

The gaming {industry} was rising apace earlier than the pandemic. Covid-19 lockdowns bolstered its enchantment—to hardened players with extra time on their arms and bored neophytes alike. Worldwide revenues shot up by 23% in 2020. NewZoo, an evaluation agency, places them at practically $180bn. Microsoft is already a giant participant within the enterprise, due to its Xbox video games console. It has made a string of gaming acquisitions since 2014, when Satya Nadella, its chief government, took the reins. The Activision Blizzard deal would cement its place. Once accomplished in 2023, it can make Microsoft the third-largest video-gaming agency by income, behind solely Tencent, a Chinese large, and Sony, Microsoft’s perennial rival in consoles.

Activision Blizzard’s share worth had slid by round 40% between a peak final February and the deal’s announcement, as the corporate was embroiled in a sexual-harassment scandal and a few of its video games underwhelmed. That might have made it look low cost in relative phrases, given the advantages it brings to Microsoft. It boasts annual revenues of round $8bn and internet revenue margins of 30%. Most essential, Activision Blizzard provides loads of content material—and in video video games, as in the remainder of the media {industry}, content material is king, says Piers Harding-Rolls of Ampere Analysis, one other analysis agency. Like the movie enterprise, the place “Star Wars” movies, even unhealthy ones, are dependable money-spinners, video video games rely more and more on “franchises”—widespread settings or manufacturers that may be squeezed for normal new video games. Activision Blizzard boasts, amongst others, “Call of Duty”, a best-selling collection of military-themed shoot-em-ups, “Candy Crush”, a preferred pattern-matching cellular sport, and “Warcraft”, a light-hearted fantasy setting.

In the brief time period, the deal provides Microsoft extra of a foothold within the smartphone-gaming market, to which it has had little publicity. King, a mobile-focused subsidiary of Activision Blizzard, boasts round 245m month-to-month gamers of its smartphone video games, most of whom faucet away at “Candy Crush”. It can also be a strike towards Sony. If Microsoft controls the rights to “Call of Duty”, it may possibly determine whether or not or to not enable the video games to look on Sony’s rival PlayStation machine. When Microsoft purchased ZeniMax Media, one other video games developer, for $7.5bn in 2020, it stated it will honour the phrases of ZeniMax’s present publishing agreements with Sony, however that Sony’s entry to new video games can be thought of “on a case-by-case basis”.

In the long run, says Mr Harding-Rolls, the deal ought to assist Microsoft obtain its ambition to make gaming cheaper and extra accessible (together with, if hype is to be believed, within the virtual-reality “metaverse”). Its “Game Pass” product already provides console and PC players entry to a rotating library of video video games, which often price $40-60 every, for $10 a month. Adding Activision Blizzard’s catalogue to the service may enhance its enchantment. It may additionally strengthen Microsoft’s two-year-old game-streaming service, which goals to make use of the agency’s Azure cloud-computing division to do for video video games what Netflix did for video. Microsoft hopes to stream video games throughout the web to a telephone, tv or PC, eradicating the necessity to personal a robust, devoted console or PC. That may decrease the price of the pastime and draw in additional gamers, particularly in middle-income nations the place smartphones are widespread however consoles are uncommon. And that, in flip, would make unique content material much more priceless.

Other companies—each games-industry veterans and arriviste tech titans attracted by the sector’s progress—have streaming ambitions of their very own. Sony runs its personal service, known as “PlayStation Now”. Amazon launched an early model of its personal “Luna” service in 2020. “GeForce Now”, a streaming providing from Nvidia, a maker of gaming-focused microchips, launched the identical 12 months. But none is as well-placed as Microsoft, which has a long time of expertise within the video games enterprise and boasts the world’s second-largest cloud-computing operation after Amazon. And the extra content material Microsoft owns, the extra enticing it may possibly make its service in contrast with its rivals.

Such pondering might provoke extra offers by Microsoft’s rivals, desperate to snap up franchises of their very own whereas they’ll. The gaming {industry} was already seeing loads of merger exercise. Last 12 months noticed 5 offers price $1bn or extra. On January tenth Take-Two Interactive, a sport developer and writer, spent $13bn to purchase Zynga, a maker of mobile-phone video games. Besides Amazon, each Apple and Netflix have dipped their toes into the video-game enterprise in recent times; an acquisition by both one may assist enhance their presence. Consolidation is the secret.

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