With Microsoft shopping for Activision Blizzard (so as to add to Zenimax Media and the various different studios and publishers Microsoft owns), Take-Two shopping for Zynga, Embracer Group shopping for Gearbox Leisure, and Sony shopping for Bungie (with Sony CEO Jim Ryan saying to anticipate extra of the identical), it has been a season of consolidation within the videogame business. In line with a report by Bloomberg, Ubisoft could possibly be subsequent.
“A number of personal fairness companies together with Blackstone Inc. and KKR & Co. have been finding out the French enterprise,” in accordance with Bloomberg’s nameless sources, who additionally stated, “Ubisoft hasn’t entered into any severe negotiations with potential acquirers, and it is unclear whether or not its main shareholder is prepared to pursue a deal”.
This report’s veracity was backed up by Kotaku, whose sources amongst Ubisoft builders, each present and former, claimed that “the corporate will finally promote to somebody amid a flagging inventory worth and ongoing manufacturing struggles.”
The writer of Murderer’s Creed and Far Cry actually has issues—in accordance with an Axios report from December, Ubisoft has shed staff at an alarming charge because of low pay, points with its artistic route, higher alternatives elsewhere, and widespread office abuse. Lately, a Ubisoft worker group referred to as out firm management for failing to deal with these points. However being taken over by a personal fairness agency, which may lay off staff and push the French writer even additional into trend-chasing cynicism than its unsuccessful dabbling in NFTs, would not be a lot of an enchancment.
Yesterday Ubisoft formally introduced Challenge Q, a multiplayer shooter that’s presently in early growth. It then needed to follow-up the announcement on Twitter with replies explaining that, no, it is not a battle royale, and no, there are no plans to add NFTs.
In 2016, Ubisoft managed to go off a hostile takeover by Vivendi, which finally offered the final of its shares in 2019.