Sunday, November 29, 2015

Activision to buy ‘Candy Crush’ maker for $5.9 billion.

Activision to buy ‘Candy Crush’ maker for $5.9 billion

Why Candy Crush is drain on economy

Activision Blizzard will pay $5.9 billion to buy Candy Crush maker King Digital Entertainment, combining a console gaming power with an established player in the fast-growing mobile gaming field.Activision, which owns the extraordinarily successful “Call of Duty” series, said the deal will create one of the largest global entertainment networks with more than half a billion combined monthly active users in 196 countries.It also will help Activision get its games out of the living room and into the hands of potential players through smartphones and tablets, a market with seemingly unlimited growth potential.Activision said mobile gaming is expected to generate more than $36 billion in revenue by the end of 2015 and grow cumulatively by more than 50 per cent from 2015 to 2019.The deal also will help Activision diversify its customer base. CEO Robert Kotick told CNBC on Tuesday that about 60 per cent of King’s audience is female.“Attracting women to gaming is a really important part of our strategy,” he said.
READ MORE: Mark Zuckerberg may have finally killed ‘Candy Crush’ requests for good
Still, questions remain about what the advantage will be for the two companies, and perhaps more importantly, to gamers.King has struggled to follow up on the success of its Candy Crush series, a game so pervasive that a British lawmaker was admonished after being caught playing it during a Parliamentary committee hearing.King’s revenue fell 18 per cent to $490 million in the second quarter, and gross bookings also dropped 13 per cent, both of which the company attributed to the maturing of its Candy Crush franchise.Jefferies analysts Brian Pitz and Brian Fitzgerald said that replicating the success of Candy Crush is a daunting task.“We expect a heavy dose of skepticism from investors especially given the large deal size,” the analysts wrote in a research note.Activision Blizzard Inc., based in Santa Monica, California, will pay $18 in cash for each King share, a 20 per cent premium over its Friday closing price. Kotick said the deal gives his company “a very productive way” to use foreign cash that had not been earning a lot of money.U.S. tax rates prompt companies to avoid transferring money earned overseas back home to the parent.The boards of both companies have approved the deal, but King shareholders must still vote on it and regulators in Ireland must also sign off. The companies expect it to close next spring.Shares of King Digital Entertainment Plc., which went public in March 2014, jumped 15 per cent, or $2.34, to $17.88 Tuesday in pre-market trading and after the deal was announced. Meanwhile, Activision slipped 12 cents to $34.35.

© The Canadian Press, 2015

 

Xbox One will support over 100 Xbox 360 games starting this week

Xbox One will support over 100 Xbox 360 games starting this week

Starting Thursday, Xbox One users will be able to play over 100 games that were previously only available on the Xbox 360 for free.
After a long wait, Xbox One users will finally be able this week to play over 100 games that were previously only available on the Xbox 360. Even better, Microsoft won’t charge them to do so.Microsoft first announced it was working on backwards compatibility for Xbox One in June during a press conference at the E3 gaming expo. So what does this mean for gamers?

Starting Thursday, discs from the previous Xbox console can simply be inserted and downloaded to the hard drive and played on the newer console – a feature users had been asking the company for since the Xbox One’s release in November 2013. The games will run just as they did on Xbox 360 and will also be compatible with new Xbox One features, such as the screenshot tool and streaming to Windows 10 devices.If you bought a game directly on your Xbox 360 console in the online store, the game will be automatically added to your library and become available for download.But Microsoft will only have compatibility for 104 games on Thursday, including the complete Gears of War catalog, Assassin’s Creed II, Fallout 3, Borderlands, and Castle Crashers. The company has promised gamers it will work quickly to make all games available.Some of Xbox’s most popular titles – like Halo Reach, Halo Wars, Call of Duty: Black Ops 1, and the Bioshock series – will be compatible by Decembar.

© Shaw media, 2015