Game Pass Price Hike Criticized by FTC in Case Against Activision Merger

PS4 & PS5

Products You May Like

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has blasted Game Pass price hike in a new letter arguing against Microsoft’s purchase of Activision Blizzard. The FTC’s appeal against the merger is pending before the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, where the authority is attempting to make the case that Microsoft’s consolidation activity harms consumers.

Game Pass price hike shows Microsoft’s unchecked power post Activision merger, says FTC

In its letter (via The Verge), FTC argues that Microsoft has “degraded” Game Pass by squeezing more money out of existing customers and introducing an inferior tier that doesn’t offer the day-one releases it has always promised. The authority sees this as evidence of Microsoft exercising its post-merger market power unchecked.

The FTC also highlighted the mass layoffs at Xbox, many of which impacted Activision Blizzard.

“Microsoft’s price increases and product degradation — combined with Microsoft’s reduced
investments in output and product quality via employee layoffs — are the hallmarks of a firm exercising market power post-merger,” FTC wrote. “Microsoft’s price increases coincide with adding Call of Duty [Black Ops 6] to Game Pass’s most expensive tier, and discontinuing the console tier will happen shortly before releasing CoD’s newest game.”

Microsoft had previously promised that all Game Pass users will be able to play Black Ops 6 at launch.

Articles You May Like

SEGA looks like it could be bringing back one of the smuggest blowhole-owners gaming has ever seen, if new trademarks mean anything
PlayStation Store: December 2024’s top downloads
Players’ Choice: Vote for December 2024’s best new game
Elden Ring Nightreign network test sign-ups open, as FromSoft makes safe bet its maidenless hardcores will battle through site outages to spaff away some of Valentine’s Day
Nippon Ichi Software’s ‘Phantom Brave: The Lost Hero’ Scores Free eShop Demo This Week

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *