Skip to main content

Vivendi looking to sell stake in Call of Duty, Diablo parent company Activision Blizzard for $8 bil

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The business of trading massive international corporations isn’t fundamentally different from any other business. The same maxim of buy low before selling high applies. After five years in the Call of Duty business, French company Vivendi is looking to sell off its stake in Activision Blizzard. Back in 2007, the company acquired Activision for a cool $1.7 billion and merged it into one corporate entity alongside the Diablo III studio. In the process, Vivendi shut down Sierra its other major game operation that existed alongside Blizzard. Now Vivendi’s looking to get out of gaming entirely and unload its stake in Activision Blizzard to whomever is willing to spend $8.1 billion. That’s what you call selling high.

Bloomberg reported on Saturday that a source close to the situation said that since Vivendi chief Jean-Bernard Levy stepped down from his position, the company has been actively looking for someone to buy up its 61% stake in Activision Blizzard. If it doesn’t find a buyer willing to meet the steep asking price, Vivendi plans to divest itself in the company on the open market, making its shares available publicly. Word has been spreading through the industry since April that Vivendi has been looking to distance itself from Activision Blizzard.

On the one hand, it seems like Activision Blizzard is a desirable purchase. Activision generates nearly $5 billion in revenue each year. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 generated $1 billion in sales in its first 16 days on shelves in 2011, breaking the previous media record held by the movie Avatar which generated the same sum in 17 days. The company’s properties, from Call of Duty: Black Ops to StarCraft II, are proven earners and critically respected by and large. The company is one of the three biggest publishers in the world and it employs potent creators despite its populist publishing practices.

Activision Blizzard is also vulnerable though. Its position of power in the broader video game industry is tenuous to say the least. World of Warcraft is steadily shedding users and its unknown whether Blizzard’s follow up to that game, the mysterious Project Titan, will match its predecessor’s zeitgeist-defining success. While Activision is preparing for the transition to the Xbox 720 and PlayStation 4 with big budget titles like the Bungie-developed “Destiny” MMO shooters, it’s also only just starting to develop its presence in the mobile market, the area of the game industry with the most growth potential. It’s simply impossible to now at this point whether Activision Blizzard will still enjoy the same earning power it has today in just five years’ time.

Editors' Recommendations

Anthony John Agnello
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anthony John Agnello is a writer living in New York. He works as the Community Manager of Joystiq.com and his writing has…
How to get to Monkey Island in Sea of Thieves
An election poster for guybrush in Sea of Thieves.

Over the course of its many years of updates and expansions, Sea of Thieves has had a few notable crossovers with other pirate franchises. The Pirates of the Caribbean crossover let you team up with the legendary Jack Sparrow, but the Monkey Island content felt like it came out of nowhere. For those unaware, Monkey Island is a series of pirate point-and-click games that were as funny as the puzzles were obscure. Thankfully, you don't have to intuit that you need to combine a cat whisker with a mason jar to bypass a skeleton guard to get to this new content, but it is more challenging than you might think.

Read more
3 Xbox Game Pass games you need to play this weekend (May 3-5)
Senua in Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice.

Another weekend is upon us, and you're probably looking for some games to kill time with over the course of it. We're in a bit of a lull right now ahead of a flurry of releases starting next week, so it's a great time to dip back into the Xbox Game Pass catalog and check out some games that you may have missed. There are three games in particular that I think you should check out this weekend if you're looking for something to play.

One is an unsettling adventure that's getting an Xbox-exclusive sequel later this month. The next is a finely animated roguelike indie that recently made its way to Microsoft's gaming subscription service. Finally, there's a relaxing adventure that gives players a lot of freedom, yet is short enough to beat in a weekend. If you're having trouble deciding what to play this weekend, give one of these games a shot.
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice

Read more
3 underrated PS Plus games you should play this weekend (May 3-5)
The main character of Tales of Kenzera: Zau stands with two elemental items.

PlayStation Plus Premium and Extra have been around for almost two years, and during that time the subscription service has established itself as an ample competitor to Xbox Game Pass. That means there is a wealth of great games for PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 owners to check out if they're looking for something to play this weekend. I think PS Plus subscribers should be looking toward some of the more underrated games in the subscription service this weekend too.

I have three particular picks in mind. The first is an enjoyable Metroidvania that came to PS Plus' game catalog when it launched just a couple of weeks ago and deserves a lot more attention than it's getting. After that, there's an action-platformer that pays homage to series like Ninja Gaiden that you should check out before it leaves the catalog. Finally, there's a PS2-era Star Wars game that fills the niche a recently canceled game would have.
Tales of Kenzera: Zau

Read more