OmegaSupreme
advanced basic bitch
Isn't there a deadline coming up where Ms has to pay like 3 billion just to keep this dream alive?
Always funny when the whole thing already happenend when I arrive.As soon as the likes of you stop their accusations and propaganda - sure.
Thanks for letting me know EinsteinThe CAT has nothing whatsoever to do with EU, they're a uk entity.
But look at TV and film streaming services - Amazon, Paramount, Fox, Disney, Warner Brothers, Comcast etc. It's not exactly a market dominated by plucky and innovative start-ups. It's dominated by legacy content owners. Sony or Nintendo could enter the cloud market at any time and rival MS because they have the content to do so. The EU decision was based on the fact that at least allowing new smaller companies access to the equivilant of say Warner Brothers back catalog for 10 years is better for competition than having them try to compete for content where they are already behind and have to outbid companies with much deeper pockets.I believe the CMA see this as some sort of emerging TV and film scenario but in my opinion that is passive whilst the interactive element of gaming with response times makes it uncertain that cloud gaming will ever have that sort of impact that it has on TV and films.
They work the same way geforce now does you pay for a subscription to their cloud servers then link your steam/epic/ea account. They charge just like nvidia, you don't seem to understand how these cloud providers work. They don't supply games except free to play stuff (just like geforce now) and the publisher has already got your money when you bought the game on steam/epic etc.Boosteroid already has those games, which means whatever agreement ABK was demanding, they got it.
And if Nvidia is charging $$ from their customers, it is only fair they pay whatever money ABK is asking for their games.
Finally someone gets it. Blocking the deal fixes nothing unless this EU ruling/remedy still gets pushed through and to all publishers aswell. These start ups are screwed without the free license, although I would like to see the 10 year time frame removed and if you have a license for said game you can stream it on anyones service without publishers able to block it.The EU decision was based on the fact that at least allowing new smaller companies access to the equivilant of say Warner Brothers back catalog for 10 years is better for competition than having them try to compete for content where they are already behind and have to outbid companies with much deeper pockets.
According to all the Sony shills on this forum it is.
But look at TV and film streaming services - Amazon, Paramount, Fox, Disney, Warner Brothers, Comcast etc. It's not exactly a market dominated by plucky and innovative start-ups. It's dominated by legacy content owners. Sony or Nintendo could enter the cloud market at any time and rival MS because they have the content to do so. The EU decision was based on the fact that at least allowing new smaller companies access to the equivilant of say Warner Brothers back catalog for 10 years is better for competition than having them try to compete for content where they are already behind and have to outbid companies with much deeper pockets.
Finally someone gets it. Blocking the deal fixes nothing unless this EU ruling/remedy still gets pushed through and to all publishers as well. These start ups are screwed without the free license, although I would like to see the 10 year time frame removed and if you have a license for said game you can stream it on anyones service without publishers able to block it.
July 1st.Isn't there a deadline coming up where Ms has to pay like 3 billion just to keep this dream alive?
That is a false equivalency.Whats rubbish is believing a small startup is going to be able to afford to pay activision for their games without the EU remedies. In the current market/system if you buy cod somewhere you can only use it on your local machine as they block all services like geforce now/boosteroid. With the EU remedy the streaming service provider doesn't need to also get permission from activision, if you have a license for cod you can use it on any of them without them having to make an agreement and possibly pay activision.
Blocking the deal doesn't actually protect startups in streaming, they are not going to have the money to outbid ms/sony/amazon/nvidia for streaming rights. They should block the deal and enforce the EU remedy on all current publishers if the goal is to help startups in the "nascent" cloud market.
July 1st.
Just hoping this shit is done by that time.
Then what's the point in posting about this imaginary pressure the eu's decision is putting on the cma, Einstein? You know, the pressure that only exists in your and other xbox fanboys minds?Thanks for letting me know Einstein![]()
Can this get approved already.
Sure, sure, and how does it work?These start ups are screwed without the free license, although I would like to see the 10 year time frame removed and if you have a license for said game you can stream it on anyones service without publishers able to block it.
- July 18th 2023: The end of the second extension and final outside date in the merger agreement. If MS quits by that date they have to pay a termination fee of $3,000,000,000; if they don't, they'll have to renegotiate the outside date with ABK.Isn't there a deadline coming up where Ms has to pay like 3 billion just to keep this dream alive?
- July 18th 2023: The end of the second extension and final outside date in the merger agreement. If MS quits by that date they have to pay a termination fee of $3,000,000,000; if they don't, they'll have to renegotiate the outside date with ABK.
Welp, he who shall not be named will get you banned on that other site. Apparently he started doxxing members there.
Batten down the hatches lol
Then what's the point in posting about this imaginary pressure the eu's decision is putting on the cma, Einstein? You know, the pressure that only exists in your and other xbox fanboys minds?
If you do in fact know that the cma has nothing to do with the eu, then there was no point in what you posted. Of course you were fully aware of that, and posted it anyway.
Yes, but temporarily, at least unless the CMA reverses its decision.If I'm understanding this correctly. They can avoid paying it if they extend or renegotiate the deal with ABK right?
There is more to it.That 3 billion is only guaranteed if they don't do anything.
Yes, but temporarily, at least unless the CMA reverses its decision.
There is more to it.
They pay 3 billion when the deal is abandoned, which happens on July 18.
MS and ABK can get together and create a new acquisition agreement that essentially extends the deadline. However, it's not as simple as that comes with a few caveats:
And if they can't get the new agreement, the deal is off on July 18 and MS must pay $3 billion.
- ABK will have to have their shareholders sign off on the acquisition one more time.
- ABK will now not settle for $3 billion. They will likely ask for $5B, $6B, or more as the next penalty.
- ABK shareholders will also likely ask for more than $95 per share now.
- Statistically, the chances of the deal going through (the chances of CAT making the CMA reverse their decision) is less than 5%. So someone at Microsoft will have to be the one to propose to the BoDs to buy ABK at more than $95 per share and pay them $6 billion in penalty if the acquisition fails (the chances of which is more than 95%). And ABK will have to convince their shareholders to say not to $3 billion now.
- And while all of this is happening, ABK cannot operate normally as they were independent. There may very well be a period where ABK does not have any marketing agreement with anyone (MS or Sony) for Call of Duty -- which will affect their revenue as well as their shareholders' decision.
It only exists in Xbox fanboys minds yet is being picked up by mainstream press like The Times.
Someone call Microsoft and tell them the deal only has a 5% chance of closing![]()
You think?I'm sure they know what their chances are.
You think?![]()
i do wonder how it will playout if Activision has no marketing deal with anyone, will COD sales be impacted a bit or is it like GTA that need no marketingYes, but temporarily, at least unless the CMA reverses its decision.
There is more to it.
They pay 3 billion when the deal is abandoned, which happens on July 18.
MS and ABK can get together and create a new acquisition agreement that essentially extends the deadline. However, it's not as simple as that comes with a few caveats:
And if they can't get the new agreement, the deal is off on July 18 and MS must pay $3 billion.
- ABK will have to have their shareholders sign off on the acquisition one more time.
- ABK will now not settle for $3 billion. They will likely ask for $5B, $6B, or more as the next penalty.
- ABK shareholders will also likely ask for more than $95 per share now.
- Statistically, the chances of the deal going through (the chances of CAT making the CMA reverse their decision) is less than 5%. So someone at Microsoft will have to be the one to propose to the BoDs to buy ABK at more than $95 per share and pay them $6 billion in penalty if the acquisition fails (the chances of which is more than 95%). And ABK will have to convince their shareholders to say not to $3 billion now.
- And while all of this is happening, ABK cannot operate normally as they were independent. There may very well be a period where ABK does not have any marketing agreement with anyone (MS or Sony) for Call of Duty -- which will affect their revenue as well as their shareholders' decision.
What's the latest update on this whole shit guys ?
The Times haven’t pushed this video on any of their mainstream channels as far as I can see, which backs up the original point. There is no external pressure.To be fair, I don't think Times main audience is on Youtube.
No one should take you seriously reading your comments in this thread. Funny, look who you’re quoting in that post, hope you aren’t yet another sock account.This could well be going through guys, after reading that it seems the CAT are going to take the CMA to the cleaners.
Breakup fees are usually pretty cut and dried. Renegotiated deals would make the original deal void. The concept of them is around the effort to even merge. There's thousands of man hours and resources burned in order to go through due diligence and such. The merger I was a part of cost $300 million dollars when it fell through. They had stationary, new paint, and building signs all ready to go which was all garbage after the deal ended.If I'm understanding this correctly. They can avoid paying it if they extend or renegotiate the deal with ABK right?
That 3 billion is only guaranteed if they don't do anything.
It only exists in Xbox fanboys minds yet is being picked up by mainstream press like The Times.
OK buddy, move along.Mods are on a roll with the bans. We want an astroturfer-free zone.
The Times haven’t pushed this video on any of their mainstream channels as far as I can see, which backs up the original point. There is no external pressure.
No one should take you seriously reading your comments in this thread. Funny, look who you’re quoting in that post, hope you aren’t yet another sock account.
It'll certainly have a negative effect. If it weren't gonna have any impact, they'd not be doing these marketing deals in the first place.i do wonder how it will playout if Activision has no marketing deal with anyone, will COD sales be impacted a bit or is it like GTA that need no marketing
until now we haven't seen how is Activision without a marketing deal
and seeing the quality of their games i want them to have a drop in revenue for COD to wake up and improve the game because these last few years they are trash
OK buddy, move along.
Please do enlighten us what the statistical probability is of the deal passing through. Don't guess. Give us a solid number based on historical cases that involve CAT and CMA.Someone call Microsoft and tell them the deal only has a 5% chance of closing![]()
Shall I pull a number out of my ass just like all the so called experts here? Nah I'll just wait, but you all do make me laugh.Please do enlighten us what the statistical probability is of the deal passing through. Don't guess. Give us a solid number based on historical cases that involve CAT and CMA.
We'll wait.
Context?Welp, he who shall not be named will get you banned on that other site. Apparently he started doxxing members there.
Batten down the hatches lol
I keep explaining to you that this being in the public sphere is the worst thing for the deal. The British Political system is an entirely different beast but you refuse to understand it.
You’ve provided proof that a major publication found it worthy of covering in their d-tier content service with an audience of a few thousand people. It definitely is in the mind of Xbox fanboys and not based in reality in any way. Microsoft tried to push that angle in the immediate aftermath, alongside the rest of the toys they threw out of the pram. It didn’t stick though, because no one cares.I'm English, I understand it perfectly.
This was a podcast originally so the views on YouTube is pretty irrelevant, point is the rejection of the deal has got wrapped up with Brexit and is not just in the mind of "Xbox Famboys" at all and I've provided proof.
Context?
Mate, british people arent bright (no offense guys). They are like mini americans.I'm English, I understand it perfectly.
This was a podcast originally so the views on YouTube is pretty irrelevant, point is the rejection of the deal has got wrapped up with Brexit and is not just in the mind of "Xbox Famboys" at all and I've provided proof.
But of course he is. Pathetic.He's threatening to dox Idas via twitter.
Mate, british people arent bright (no offense guys). They are like mini americans.
Mini Americans? Are you unwell?Mate, british people arent bright (no offense guys). They are like mini americans.
CMA wont get pressured by that, because they are seperate entity. The goverment cant intervene their decision other than CAT. And EU decision means nothing to them, as Xbox is big in UK, compared to EU.
It will all come down to how good that Arsenal fan lawyer is. (I still cant believe he is representing Mancity, even though he is an arsenal fan).
Pocket money to them. I wouldn't worry about it bud.Isn't there a deadline coming up where Ms has to pay like 3 billion just to keep this dream alive?