Microsoft Buys Gaming Firm ZeniMax Media For $7.5 Bn

Microsoft on Monday announced it will acquire ZeniMax Media for $7.5 billion, adding muscle to its Xbox arm ahead of a fierce battle in the market for new gaming consoles.

ZeniMax is the parent company of Bethesda Softworks, publisher of popular game franchises including Dishonored, Doom, Fallout and Elder Scrolls.

"Bethesda brings an impressive portfolio of games, technology, talent, as well as a track record of blockbuster commercial success," Microsoft said in statement.

The company will pay for the acquisition in cash with the deal expected to close by the mid-2021.

The deal comes as Microsoft prepares to release its Xbox Series X in mid-November, its first update to the gaming console since 2013.

Sony's eagerly awaited PlayStation 5 will also launch in November, setting up a holiday-season clash with Xbox as the gaming industry thrives during the pandemic.

The competing consoles will be released within two days of each other ahead of the Christmas rush, both aiming to capitalize on a rare bright spot in the economic carnage caused by the coronavirus crisis.

"Gaming is the most expansive category in the entertainment industry, as people everywhere turn to gaming to connect, socialise and play with their friends," said Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella.

"Bethesda has seen success across every category of games, and together, we will further our ambition to empower the more than three billion gamers worldwide."

Buying ZeniMax "checks a lot of boxes" for Microsoft, according to Baird analyst Colin Sebastian.

The acquisition strengthens the Xbox games portfolio as competition for people's play time increases and boosts Microsoft's efforts to be the premier platform for cloud-based gaming, the analyst said in a note to investors.

The deal should also free Bethesda to focus on making hit games while Microsoft tends to the work of hosting titles in the cloud for play across a variety of devices.

Xbox team head Phil Spencer has promised to bring top Bethesda titles to the Xbox Game Pass service.

While it is possible Bethesda may publish games for PlayStation, at least those already in development, it is doubtful any titles would be available to competing cloud gaming services, Sebastian said in a note to investors.

Adding blockbuster franchises from ZeniMax as exclusives would give the new generation Xbox console more appeal when it takes on the latest PlayStation.

Pricing of the consoles is similar, and PlayStation is thought to have an edge but players are strongly driven by game content.

"If you were going to buy a PlayStation to play Bethesda games, now you are not," said Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter.

Since most major video games are playable on personal computers powered by Windows software, that would be unlikely to change once Microsoft owns ZeniMax and its studios.

Consoles, however, are another matter. PlayStation fans devoted to franchises such as Elder Scrolls or shooter Wolfenstein could find them unavailable on the consoles going forward.

"If you want to play Elder Scrolls 6, you will have to buy Xbox," said Pachter.

The extent to which ZeniMax games will remain available on PlayStation will depend on how the company's contracts are written with Sony.

"Generations of gamers have been captivated by the renowned franchises in the Bethesda portfolio and will continue to be so for years to come as part of Xbox," Spencer said in announcing the deal.

In addition to Bethesda Softworks, ZeniMax also owns Bethesda Game Studios, id Software, ZeniMax Online Studios, Arkane, MachineGames, Tango Gameworks, Alpha Dog, and Roundhouse Studios, employing more than 2,300 people worldwide.

Copyright AFP. All rights reserved.

RECENT NEWS

Europe Paralysed As Middle East War Exposes Strategic Weakness

Europe likes to describe itself as a geopolitical power. The war spreading across the Middle East has revealed something... Read more

Tesla Moves Into Britains Power Market After Ofgem Approval

Tesla has secured approval to supply electricity directly to homes and businesses across Great Britain after the UK ener... Read more

War Risk Returns To Markets As VIX Surges

For most of the past year, global markets behaved as though geopolitical risk had largely disappeared. Inflation was eas... Read more

Gulf Shipping Crisis Raises Risk Of Global Food Price Shock

Tensions in the Middle East are beginning to spill into global food markets as disruption to shipping through the Strait... Read more

Markets Prepare For Fallout From US Led Airstrikes

US and Israeli strikes on Iran have jolted global markets back into a world where geopolitical risk is not a tail event ... Read more

WPP Aims To Cut £500 In Costs In AI Race

WPP has unveiled a sweeping restructuring programme aimed at stripping out £500mn of annual costs by 2028, as new chief... Read more