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Microsoft signed a 10-year agreement with Japanese cloud game company Ubitus to push forward the Blizzard acquisition.

2025-01-15 Update From: SLTechnology News&Howtos shulou NAV: SLTechnology News&Howtos > IT Information >

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Shulou(Shulou.com)11/24 Report--

Thanks to CTOnews.com netizen Xiao Zhan for the clue delivery! CTOnews.com March 16 news, Microsoft in order to promote the Blizzard acquisition, recently signed a 10-year agreement with Nintendo, Nvidia, Ukraine Boosteroid, today again signed a 10-year agreement with Japanese cloud game company Ubitus.

Under the agreement, cloud gaming company Ubitus can offer Xbox games and Activision Blizzard games through the cloud after Microsoft buys Blizzard.

Founded in 2013, Ubitus currently supports cloud games for a number of companies, the most famous of which are cloud versions of Nintendo Switch's "biochemical Evil" games.

Brad Smith, vice chairman and president of Microsoft, previously issued a statement, which CTOnews.com translated as follows:

The move is partly to make regulators more aware that our acquisition of Activision Blizzard will allow call of Duty to run on more devices.

If the only argument is that Microsoft will refuse to provide "call of Duty" to other platforms, then we have now signed a contract to bring it to more devices and platforms.

Of course, Sony clearly disagrees with this view. In a recent filing with the UK's Competition and Markets Authority, the PlayStation maker pointed out that Microsoft said the same thing before buying Bethesda Softworks, while Starsky did not provide it to the PS platform, which was one reason it could not believe the company's cross-platform commitment to call of Duty.

Related readings:

In order to successfully acquire Activision Blizzard, Microsoft has provided Sony with the call of Duty 10-year IP license.

"Sony uses Star to question Microsoft's non-monopoly after its acquisition of Blizzard: that's what they said before they bought Society B."

Microsoft and Boosteroid sign a 10-year agreement to express "call of Duty" that "there is no monopoly."

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