Microsoft is committed to bringing Call of Duty to Nintendo, both on current consoles and on future hardware. The tech giant has officially declared that it will offer Call of Duty on Nintendo for the next ten years, given that its Activision Blizzard merger successfully closes.
“Microsoft has entered into a 10-year commitment to bring Call of Duty to Nintendo following the merger of Microsoft and Activision Blizzard King,” Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer announced on Twitter. “Microsoft is committed to helping bring more games to more people – however they choose to play.”
The ten-year commitment most likely means that Call of Duty will roll out on Switch, followed by further iterations of the console, as well as any other gaming devices Nintendo debuts down the line.
Spencer went on to say that Call of Duty will continue to be offered simultaneously on Steam and Xbox.
As of right now, Microsoft’s Blizzard acquisition is still in the air. The Federal Trade Commission is expected to meet on Thursday to discuss whether they’ll make moves to curb the deal. The FTC is allegedly concerned that the merger would give Microsoft too much control over the market.
In other gaming news, a new Elden Ring update sees multiplayer colosseum battles.
Tagged: gaming