Someone needs to wrestle the fountain pen out of Phil Spencer's hand. The Xbox boss just can't stop inking ten-year deals to bring Activision games to different platforms (in the event its acquisition goes through): He's signed them with Nintendo, Nvidia, Boosteroid and Ubitus (I hadn't heard of them before they made the deal either), and has offered them to Sony and Steam, neither of which were interested.
Well, add another contract to the pile, because while we weren't looking, Phil went out and signed another ten-year commitment to EE, one of the UK's 'Big Four' mobile phone networks (and an internet service provider, too). The deal was announced by Spencer in a tweet posted earlier today.
Microsoft and @EE are expanding our partnership with a 10-year commitment in cloud gaming to bring PC games built by Activision Blizzard, following the acquisition, and Xbox to @EE customers. We are committed to bring more games to more people, however they choose to play.April 11, 2023
The deal apparently pertains to "cloud gaming," but eagle-eyed readers will spot that the statement is otherwise totally devoid of detail about what it means to bring "PC games built by Activision Blizzard" to the company responsible for my spotty 5G connection.
I imagine the details of the deal are fairly irrelevant to Microsoft, which has been accruing these kinds of agreements mostly in order to wave them in the faces of the various national regulators scrutinising its acquisition of Activision Blizzard. be that this just commits the two companies to keep that going. Or perhaps EE is on the verge of announcing some kind of ill-advised streaming device (it's probably not this).
I've reached out to Microsoft to ask what the actual mechanics of this deal might be, and I'll update this piece if I hear back.
I imagine the actual mechanics of the deal are fairly irrelevant to Microsoft, which has been accruing these kinds of agreements mostly in order to wave them in the faces of the various national regulators scrutinising its acquisition of Activision Blizzard.
Microsoft's game plan is to prove to institutions like the Federal Trade Commission, Competition and Markets Authority, and European Union that it can be trusted not to exploit its control over Activision to unfairly distort the market. It hopes that deals like these—which compel it to play nice for a full decade—will convince regulators it won't hoard all its newly-acquired Activision valuables to itself. It seems to be working, but there's still time for Sony's lawyers to pull some tricks from their sleeves.