My unrequired opinion:

I am very worried of this line:

"Microsoft already accounts for an estimated 60-70% of global cloud gaming services and has other important strengths in cloud gaming from owning Xbox, the leading PC operating system (Windows) and a global cloud computing infrastructure (Azure and Xbox Cloud Gaming)."

And no, Microsoft ain't no saint when it comes to trying things in a monopolistic ways, BUT, this is clearly a stigma and not factually applicable on what is the concern here, gaming industry, not just a whole business.

If it comes to go to court, Microsoft has better chances there than trying to rationalize with regulators already with a past experience that refused to be on the past.
My unrequired opinion: I am very worried of this line: "Microsoft already accounts for an estimated 60-70% of global cloud gaming services and has other important strengths in cloud gaming from owning Xbox, the leading PC operating system (Windows) and a global cloud computing infrastructure (Azure and Xbox Cloud Gaming)." And no, Microsoft ain't no saint when it comes to trying things in a monopolistic ways, BUT, this is clearly a stigma and not factually applicable on what is the concern here, gaming industry, not just a whole business. If it comes to go to court, Microsoft has better chances there than trying to rationalize with regulators already with a past experience that refused to be on the past.
UK regulators will oppose to the Activision Blizzard acquisition
Contrary to all forecasts that a “thumbs up” would have been given, United Kingdom’s market regulator known as the CMA has voted on disapproval of Microsoft buying Activision Blizzard in a big surprising turn of events. The TLDR of their rationale is that they are concerned about Microsoft's reach on Cloud Gaming adding more game catalog to an already well-built Game Pass...
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