Call of Duty: Microsoft signs deals with cloud gaming companies Boosteroid and Ubitus
Microsoft continues on its quest to make Call of Duty feel like everywhere after a successful acquisition of Activision Blizzard.
Now the company has signed deals with two more cloud gaming providers.
Call of Duty on more devices
According to agreements with Nintendo and Nvidia (GeForce Now), one of these companies is the independent cloud gaming provider Boosteroid.
Microsoft assures the company of its PC games for ten years, which, should the deal with Activision Blizzard go through, also applies to Call of Duty.
More Call of Duty news:
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Boosteroid has four million users worldwide, you can use it to stream titles you already own. This is possible via browser and dedicated apps, for example on Windows, Linux, Android TV and Mac.
The second of the new partners announced this week is Ubitus. The Japanese company already handles many cloud games available for Nintendo Switch, such as Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy and Resident Evil Village.
Microsoft uses the deals, among other things, to convince the regulatory authorities that Call of Duty should not be made exclusive, but should be made accessible to as many players as possible.
Players deserve more choice than they have now when it comes their favorite games. Today we’ve signed a 10-year deal with @Boosteroid_main enabling players to stream Xbox PC games, including Activision Blizzard PC titles like CoD following after close https://t.co/Xso6ykadw1
— Phil Spencer (@XboxP3) March 14, 2023
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Microsoft and Ubitus@ubituskk, a leading cloud gaming provider, have signed a 10-year partnership to stream Xbox PC Games as well as Activision Blizzard titles after the acquisition closes. Our commitment is to give more players, more choice.
— Phil Spencer (@XboxP3) March 15, 2023
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Reference-www.eurogamer.de