In January 2022,Microsoft announced its planned acquisition of Activision Blizzardfor $68 billion. This inevitably gave rise to controversy, not only among gamers concerned about the future availability of their favorite franchises, but also among government bodies that regulate anti-competitive behavior. One of these regulatory agencies is the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which thus far doesn’t seem strongly inclined to allow the Activision Blizzard deal to go through.

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In response, Microsoft has been providing documentation to defend its right to acquire Activision Blizzard, and the CMA has released occasional updates about its ongoing investigation. In one of the latest CMA reports, which was made available on February 8, it was revealed that Microsoft’s own internal documents admit thatXbox Game Pass“would lead to the cannibalization of B2P sales,” B2P meaning Buy-to-Play or games purchased the traditional way.

The significance of this statement, according to the CMA report, is that Microsoft’s subscription-based services like Xbox Game Pass and Xbox Live Gold may lead to a decrease in Activision’s regular game sales, which are currently a key source of revenue for the publishing giant. Activision has occasionally considered making its games available on a service like Game Pass but has so far decided that doing so would “severely cannibalize B2P sales.”

cma microsoft xbox game pass cannibalizes b2p sales

However, the CMA document goes on to state that multi-game subscription (MGS) services like Xbox Game Pass will likely remain a smaller part of console gaming offerings when compared to B2P games, at least for the foreseeable future. Echoing this sentiment,Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick has said that subscription servicesare not significantly impactful and do not cannibalize that company’s core business. The CMA’s statements were made particularly in reference to Activision potentially addingCall of Dutyand other titles to Xbox Game Pass.

Either way, some analysts believe that, despite the roadblocks erected by some government regulators, theActivision Blizzard acquisition will ultimately happen. But if the deal somehow falls through, even the CMA acknowledged in its February 8 report that Microsoft already has a “strong gaming ecosystem” that consists of consoles, subscription services, and 24 game development studios.