Microsoft has made it abundantly clear that it offered Sony a deal to put Call of Duty on the PlayStation console for ten years.

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Microsoft Corp. has offered its opponent Sony Group Corp. the option to sell Activision blockbuster Important mission at hand as a component of its gaming membership administration with an end goal to get administrative endorsement for its $69 billion procurement of Activision Blizzard Inc.

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The proposal, which Sony has not accepted, also includes rights to sell the game on the PlayStation Plus service, which provides gamers with access to a catalog of games for a monthly fee, according to a person familiar with the negotiations who declined to be identified due to the confidential nature of the discussions.

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Microsoft's Xbox Game Pass, which dominates the video game and cloud gaming subscription market, is particularly troubling to regulators in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union. A statement released by the US Federal Trade Commission last week stated that the merger would "enable Microsoft to suppress competitors to its Xbox gaming consoles and its rapidly growing subscription content and cloud-gaming business."

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Microsoft offers cloud gaming, which is still in its infancy, as part of the highest level of Game Pass. In any case, there are the people who accept that the innovation, which empowers supporters of stream explicit games to any gadget, including cell phones and tablets, may ultimately deliver consoles old. Contrasted with single game titles that cost roughly $70 every, memberships furnish gamers with admittance to a tremendous choice of games for a minimal price of roughly $10 to $15 each month.

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Sony did not immediately respond when contacted for comment. Microsoft didn't say anything because of the specific terms of its proposal to Sony.

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