2 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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More from Microsoft and Activision Blizzard: the latest news on the acquisition

Activision Blizzard CEO denies culture of harassment and blames unions for company problems

There is no war (harassment) at Ba Sing Se (Activision Blizzard).

Ash Parrish
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Microsoft has appealed the CMA’s decision to block the Activision deal, and now we know Microsoft’s arguments.

VGC spotted the “Summary of Application” document, which outlines Microsoft’s five grounds for the appeal. For example:

The Respondent’s finding that Activision would have been likely to make its gaming content available on cloud gaming services absent the Merger was irrational and arrived at in a procedurally unfair manner.

You can read the whole document here. The CMA blocked the deal in April.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The EU is expected to approve Microsoft’s Activision acquisition.

May 15th is the “likeliest date” for that to happen, according to Reuters. The approval, if it goes through, would arrive just a few weeks after UK regulators blocked the deal.

Microsoft’s Activision deal is on life support because cloud gaming still sucks

Will the UK’s decision be a self-fulfilling prophecy?

Sean Hollister
Sean Hollister
Sean Hollister
Nvidia still wants Microsoft+ActiBlizz.

GeForce NOW and other cloud gaming providers stand to gain an even deeper catalog of games if Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision is completed. We see this as a benefit to cloud gaming and hope for a positive resolution.

Not surprising, because Microsoft promised Nvidia big things if the deal went through:

Ash Parrish
Ash Parrish
“The UK is closed for business.”

Activision Blizzard has responded to the CMA’s block of its merger with Microsoft by releasing its earnings statement a day early and a statement with some pretty harsh words.

The CMA’s report contradicts the ambitions of the UK to become an attractive country to build technology businesses. We will work aggressively with Microsoft to reverse this on appeal. The report’s conclusions are a disservice to UK citizens, who face increasingly dire economic prospects. We will reassess our growth plans for the UK. Global innovators large and small will take note that - despite all its rhetoric - the UK is clearly closed for business.

Ash Parrish
Ash Parrish
“There he is, that’s the CMA.”
Stock market graph showing the stock price of Activision Blizzard taking a huge dip after the news that the UK’s CMA is blocking the Microsoft / Activision Blizzard acquisition
The Verge
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Google and Nvidia have reportedly raised some flags with Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal.

According to Bloomberg sources, they apparently expressed concerns about the megadeal to the FTC, which is suing Microsoft to block the purchase:

Google and Nvidia provided information that backs a key FTC contention — that Microsoft could gain an unfair advantage in the market for cloud, subscription and mobile gaming — according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the process is confidential. In its remarks to the FTC, Nvidia stressed the need for equal and open access to game titles but didn’t directly oppose the acquisition, according to one of the people.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Microsoft no longer claims the FTC’s structure violates the Constitution.

That’s one strategy that didn’t pay off. Great scoop from Axios’ Stephen Totilo.

Mitchell Clark
Mitchell Clark
Microsoft has formally recognized the ZeniMax union.

QA workers at Microsoft’s ZeniMax Studios have voted to join the Communications Workers of America and, true to its word, Microsoft has formally recognized the organization. That means that the National Labor Relations Board won’t have to litigate the election, and the company and the union can start negotiating.

The approximately 300 workers in the union are looking to “put an end to sudden periods of crunch, unfair pay, and lack of growth opportunities within the company,” according to one employee quoted in the CWA’s press release.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Workers at Activision Blizzard’s Proletariat studio are organizing.

Less than a month after a second group of Activision Blizzard workers voted to unionize, the Communications Workers of America announced the latest group filing for a union representation election.

The 57 workers in the unit include animators, designers, engineers, producers and quality assurance workers. Earlier this year, quality assurance workers at Activision’s Raven Software studio in Wisconsin and Blizzard Albany won their union elections, despite Activision Blizzard’s repeated attempts to prevent workers from voting.

“Everyone in the video game industry knows Activision Blizzard’s reputation for creating a hostile work environment, so earlier this year, when we heard that Blizzard was planning to acquire Proletariat, we started to discuss how we could protect the great culture we have created here,” said Dustin Yost, a Software Engineer at Proletariat. “By forming a union and negotiating a contract, we can make sure that we are able to continue doing our best work and create innovative experiences at the frontier of game development.”

Ash Parrish
Ash Parrish
Don’t you forget about me.

The folks at the Overwatch League Head Office shared a Grand Finals highlight video capturing all the match’s best moments. Since this is coming more than a month after the Grand Finals ended,

I have the suspicion that during this offseason — with no word how long it’ll be or in what capacity the Overwatch League will return when the fate of its four Chinese teams and the handful of teams that practice with them is up in the air thanks to the deal between Blizzard and its Chinese publishing partner NetEase has now dissolved — Blizzard wants to remind fans of all the fun they had watching in-person and online.

Tom Warren
Tom Warren
European Commission starts reviewing Microsoft’s Activision acquisition.

Regulators in the EU are looking at Microsoft’s $68.7 billion acquisition, and have set a November 8th provisional deadline. It comes nearly a month after the UK’s CMA regulator signaled an in-depth review. Microsoft says “the deal is progressing in line with the expected regulatory schedule and process, and we remain confident that the acquisition will close in fiscal year 2023.”

European Commission

[Competition Policy]