Saudi Arabia appears to be the first regulatory authority to approve Microsoft’s proposed $68.7 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard.

As spotted by Twitter sleuthKlobrille, Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Competition declared on Sunday that it has “no objection” to the proposed games industry buyout.

Saudi Arabia is ‘the first regulatory authority’ to approve Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal

As is typical for this size of deal,Microsoft’sActivision Blizzardacquisition is currently being investigated by regularity bodies around the world, who will decide if it complies with competition laws.

The United States’ FTC isexpectedto provide its answer to the proposed deal imminently, whilethe Competition and Markets Authority(CMA), the UK’s equivalent of the FTC, has set a deadline of September 1 to give its initial decision on the matter.

Sony says it believes Xbox owning Call of Duty ‘could influence users’ console choice’

Microsoft recently entered into a war of words withSonyover the proposed acquisition, as revealed by documents published by Brazil’s regulatory body CADE.

Sony claimed in published correspondence that the huge popularity of Call of Duty could lead tothe deal influencing players to switch from PlayStation to Xbox.

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At the time, it argued: “Call of Duty is so popular that it influences users’ choice of console, and its community of loyal users is entrenched enough that even if a competitor had the budget to develop a similar product, it would not be able to rival it.”

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Microsoft responded by noting that while numerous third parties, includingUbisoftandBandai Namco, gave responses to CADE, Sony was the only company that claimed Call of Duty was in a genre of its own with no competition.

Microsoft went on to state that Sony didn’t want to see Call of Duty games on Game Pass on day one, because it “is resentful of having to compete with Microsoft’s subscription service”.

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In itsfirst response to Microsoft’s proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzardpublished in January, Sony said it expects Call of Duty games to remain multiplatform due to “contractual agreements”.

Further reading

Microsoft’s head of gaming also subsequently confirmedhis intention to keep Call of Duty on PlayStation platformsonce Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard is completed.

However, it was later claimed that Activision Blizzard is contractually committed toreleasing only the next three Call of Duty games for PlayStation consoles, including this year’sModern Warfare2.

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