Call of Duty Warzone 2 to release next year on PlayStation and Xbox

The next Call of Duty battle royale won’t be an Xbox exclusive

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Call of Duty: Warzone 2 will be released as a standalone sequel next year onXbox Series X, PC, andPS5, despiteMicrosoft’s planned acquisition of series publisher Activision Blizzard.

That’s according to a recent report fromBloomberg, which claims that at least the next three games in the Call of Duty franchise will be distributed on PlayStation platforms. Those games are expected to be Modern Warfare 2, due to release later this year, another game from Black Ops Cold War developer Treyarch, which is planned for 2023, and Warzone 2.

Following the announcement ofMicrosoft’s agreed acquisition of ActivisionBlizzard, many suspected that Microsoft would quickly make future Call of Duty titles exclusive to its Xbox consoles.

Xbox boss Phill Spencer addressed the issue,suggestingthat upcoming titles would still release on PlayStation to abide by “existing agreements” made between Activision Blizzard andSony.

Beyond these next three Call of Duty releases, however, the future of the series is unclear.

Sony’s contractual agreements with Activision Blizzard will reportedly wrap up by the time the acquisition is finalized by the middle of next year. If Microsoft chooses to deprive Sony of future Call of Duty games, Warzone 2 could be the final game of the series to release on PlayStation.

Analysis: multiplatform for now, but it won’t last

Analysis: multiplatform for now, but it won’t last

Both Sony and Microsoft made clear last week that the next few Call of Duty games won’t be Xbox exclusives. In its first public response to the acquisition deal,Sony saidit “expect[s] that Microsoft will abide by contractual agreements and continue to ensure Activision games are multiplatform,” while Spencer said he didn’t want to“pull communities away”from PlayStation.

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That means PlayStation fans can rest easy for now, but the future may not be so bright. Once those contractual agreements have run their course, it would be prudent to expect future Call of Duty titles to move to Xbox, and only Xbox. Microsoft will be keen to deprive Sony of one of gaming’s best-selling franchises, so it can claim all Call of Duty sales revenue for itself and place its platform above Sony’s.

That exclusivity could be rolled out partially over time. Call of Duty games may release on both platforms, with specific content – such as DLC, game modes, and maps – reserved for Xbox, similar to the exclusive content that PlayStation has enjoyed for the past several years. Or, Microsoft may be willing to take the immediate sales hit and make every ounce of Call of Duty exclusive to Xbox all at once, much likeit’s doing for Starfield.

As for Warzone 2, there are no details on what the game will look like, but we can be pretty certain of a few features. First of all, it would be more than a little surprising if it wasn’t free to play.Warzonelaunched in the free-to-play model, which has quickly become the standard for the genre. Even PUBG Battlegrounds recently went free-to-play, and sawtremendous growth in its player basebecause of it.

Other than that, the fact that the game is described as a standalone sequel suggests it will bear little content connection to its predecessor, so don’t expect to carry over any of your skins or unlocks to this next game.

Callum is TechRadar Gaming’s News Writer. You’ll find him whipping up stories about all the latest happenings in the gaming world, as well as penning the odd feature and review. Before coming to TechRadar, he wrote freelance for various sites, including Clash, The Telegraph, and Gamesindustry.biz, and worked as a Staff Writer at Wargamer. Strategy games and RPGs are his bread and butter, but he’ll eat anything that spins a captivating narrative. He also loves tabletop games, and will happily chew your ear off about TTRPGs and board games.

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