FTC Drops Lawsuit Against Microsoft’s $69 Billion Activision Blizzard Takeover
Landmark Gaming Acquisition Finalized: FTC Drops Lawsuit Against Microsoft’s $69 Billion Activision Blizzard Takeover
The largest acquisition in gaming history has officially cleared its final hurdle as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) formally withdrew its antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft’s historic $69 billion purchase of Activision Blizzard. This decision paves the way for the deal’s unconditional completion, reshaping the industry’s competitive landscape.
On May 22, Reuters reported that FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson is seeking to use the agency’s resources for cases that fit with President Donald Trump’s agenda, such as a probe related to whether advertisers colluded to spend less on X.Ferguson is beginning to shut down some efforts started by his predecessor Lina Khan, including dropping a case on Thursday that had accused PepsiCo (PEP.O), opens new tab of price discrimination that favored Walmart.
Microsoft closed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard King in October 2023, but that didn’t stop the FTC from trying to break it up after the fact. The organization also spoke out against decisions Microsoft has made since the deal closed, like raising the price of Game Pass and laying off thousands of employees.
The FTC lost an appeal on 7 May seeking to reverse a judge’s decision declining to block the Microsoft-Activision deal.
Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, said on the same day that the FTC’s decision to drop the case was “a victory for players across the country and for common sense in Washington DC”.
The Activision Blizzard transaction marked the largest-ever acquisition in the video gaming market. The FTC claimed the tie-up would allow Microsoft to fend off competitors to the Xbox console and to its subscription and cloud-based gaming business.
Key Developments
- Regulatory Surrender: The FTC’s voluntary dismissal on [date] follows consecutive legal defeats, including a July 2023 federal court ruling that rejected the agency’s preliminary injunction request.
- Global Green Lights: Previously secured approvals from 40+ jurisdictions (including EU/UK conditional clearance) rendered the FTC’s opposition increasingly isolated.
- Strategic Payoff: Microsoft now fully integrates Activision’s crown jewels – Call of Duty, World of Warcraft, and Candy Crush – into its Xbox Game Pass/Xcloud ecosystem.
Industry Impact
Subscription Wars Escalation
Game Pass could reach 250M+ subscribers by 2027 with day-one AAA titles, pressuring Sony’s PlayStation Plus.
Cloud Gaming Expansion
Activision’s IP strengthens Microsoft’s xCloud infrastructure amid growing competition with Amazon Luna/NVIDIA GeForce NOW.
Labor Market Shifts
10,000+ Activision employees now under Microsoft’s union-neutral policy, potentially accelerating industry-wide labor reforms.

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