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Bloomberg: Microsoft Buying Nintendo Would Have Been a Disaster


Microsoft Corp.’s video-game head Phil Spencer might have been correct when he wrote, in a piece of corporate cringe straight out of HBO’s Succession, that acquiring Nintendo Co. would be a “career moment” for him.

Spencer’s dream of buying the venerable Japanese firm was revealed, alongside other confidential plans, in an accidental leak of emails related to Microsoft’s video-game operations recently uploaded to a federal court website. The email concerning Nintendo is dated 2020; Microsoft has acknowledged the leaked documents, but says “much has changed” since they were written.

What hasn’t changed is Nintendo’s undoubted attractiveness as an asset. Even after Microsoft completes the $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard Inc., it could no doubt afford the purchase. But even if Spencer somehow convinced Nintendo’s board to agree, and assuming such a deal cleared antitrust regulators, it’s hard to conclude it would be, as he wrote, “a good move for both companies.”

Indeed, it’s tricky to imagine a greater clash of cultures. Executives at the Japanese firm famously cut their own salaries rather than lay off workers during the failure of the Wii U1; Microsoft just laid off 10,000 workers earlier this year, before reporting record revenue. The Redmond-based firm has a decades-long history of seemingly smart but ultimately poorly managed acquisitions, from Skype to Nokia.

Spencer notes that the Nintendo board “until recently has not pushed for further increases in market growth or stock appreciation,” something that, to the despair of frustrated Nintendo bulls, is true. The video-game maker stubbornly marches to the beat of its own drum; shareholders are just one consideration.

It’s “taking a long time for Nintendo to see that their future exists off their own hardware,” Spencer also wrote. The firm has remained committed to the idea that its integration of hardware and software — or in layman’s terms, the idea that Nintendo games are available only on Nintendo devices — differentiates it from the pack. Flying in the face of conventional wisdom is Nintendo’s MO; ignoring the demands in the mid-2010s that it abandon its own machines and shift to mobile gaming is the reason the company is so successful now. The Switch is in with a chance to surpass Sony Group Corp.’s PlayStation 2 to become the best-selling console ever made.

Microsoft disagrees. It’s less concerned about hardware, and sees the future of gaming on the cloud. Gamers can play, for example, Minecraft, the franchise it acquired in 2014, on Xbox, PC, mobile or even Switch. Most likely, the source of Microsoft’s interest would be Nintendo’s intellectual property: Mario, Zelda, Donkey Kong and the host of other franchises. The value of these characters seems insufficiently factored into Nintendo’s share price, considering the recent success of The Super Mario Bros. Movie.

At least in the short run, it seems plausible that Microsoft could exploit Nintendo’s IP better than the Kyoto firm itself does. But Nintendo remains, as Spencer called it, “THE prime asset” in gaming, because of how protective it is of its properties. It hasn’t released a new mainline Mario game in six years, and it’s nearly a decade since the last new Mario Kart . Contrast that to how Microsoft has over-exploited its one-time industry-leading IPs such as the Halo series or Gears of War.

Interestingly, Spencer is not the first Microsoft executive to float this acquisition. When the US firm formed its Xbox division in the early 2000s, Nintendo was among the companies it reached out to, proposing an acquisition. It went about as well as you’d expect: “They just laughed their asses off,” one executive said years later. “Like, imagine an hour of somebody just laughing at you. That was kind of how that meeting went.”

Times have changed in Japanese corporate culture since the turn of the millennium. Foreign acquisitions of storied brands are no longer unheard of, and boards are under more pressure than ever to improve returns for shareholders. The reaction, however, to an attempted Microsoft takeover of Nintendo would likely be the same as two decades ago: laughter. (When contacted, Nintendo said it was not appropriate to comment.)

One fly in the ointment, however, might be the presence of activist investors. ValueAct Capital Partners, which built a 2% stake in Nintendo in 2020, has been holding discussions with management, though unlike some of its other dealings in Japan, the fund has not taken its push public. Another thing to note is Nintendo’s second-largest shareholder — Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has been building interests in video-game firms in Japan and beyond, while saying little about their purpose.

After seeing one beloved Japanese asset shockingly acquired, with animator Studio Ghibli being bought by a local broadcaster, the idea that Nintendo could fall into foreign hands will concern proponents of soft power. But thankfully, it seems unlikely this deal will make it out of level one.

Personal Opinion: Microsoft must never be allowed to get their hands on Nintendo. That would truly be one of the final acts which ends the gaming industry and destroys the hobby we all love.
 
Gaming industry will never end. It will always involve and change. But I couldn’t see Nintendo being own by anyone. I mean, there could be a future where it happens. Who knows. If it ever does, it been when they have another hardware failure in sales like the Wii U. That be the time or they maybe just go full on just publishing there games to all platforms
 

Barakov

Member
Thankfully, it will never happen. Nintendo will never allow themselves to be bought. They would rather burn it all down than let someone else have it.

Also, activist investors need to fuck off. Take you bullshit elsewhere.
 

zeldaring

Banned
Lol just cause microsft buys Nintendo wouldn't mean the end of the industry unless you Mean it would be a monopoly. Yea that could be a problem.
 

Topher

Identifies as young
Mike Yard K GIF by The Nightly Show
 

Flutta

Banned
Yup and this created a grudge that MS never forgot. They are waiting for the right opportunity to strike and you can bet your ass that they’re not happy with Nintendo being successfull right now. You could clearly see it when Phill was talking about the amount of cash Ninty had.
 

Robb

Gold Member
Definitely, although I don’t think much of Nintendo would be left at that point. It’d just be more franchises under MS umbrella in all but name.
 

GHG

Member
What I find most egregious about the email is the fact that he's so arrogant that he seems to think he knows what's best for Nintendo and their future.

Sa1JK6v.jpg


Imagine being in 3rd place with an ever dwindling userbase thinking you know what's best for the industry market leader. The hubris is off the charts.
 

CS Lurker

Member
It would be glorious. Be able to play Nintendo games on my PC [natively]; all online games using Azure servers (fuck nintendo's shit p2p in 2023); have a basic feature as voice-chat.

And I haven't even talked about Game Pass yet.

Please, Phil! Make it happen! <3
 
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What I find most egregious about the email is the fact that he's so arrogant that he seems to think he knows what's best for Nintendo and their future.

Sa1JK6v.jpg


Imagine being in 3rd place with an ever dwindling userbase thinking you know what's best for the industry market leader. The hubris is off the charts.
Microsoft only thinks about what is best for them. No one else. Make no mistake about it, Microsoft knows that owning the entire industry is good for them. They don't care if it's good for the industry or not.
 

Fabieter

Member
Yup and this created a grudge that MS never forgot. They are waiting for the right opportunity to strike and you can bet your ass that they’re not happy with Nintendo being successfull right now. You could clearly see it when Phill was talking about the amount of cash Ninty had.

Why would anyone care if the pride of poor guy ms got destroyed by nintendo.
 

theclaw135

Banned
Keeping Nintendo games on Nintendo devices is the best thing the company has every done.

For a while Sony and Sega jumped on the Windows 95 bandwagon, but most of those ports are rightly forgotten. Microsoft's recent insistence on day-one PC ports is just another thing helping erode Xbox.
 

Godot25

Banned
I don't even understand why it is debated...
Regulators around the world would not allow Microsoft to buy Nintendo. It's a horizontal merger that would be squashed the moment it would be announced.
You would essentially take 3-horse race and make it 2-horse race.

Microsoft got ABK across with mighty difficulties and that was a vertical merger. It should tell you everything you need to know about potential success of Nintendo acquisition.
Yes. Maybe in 2020 Microsoft thought that regulatory environment would allow that transaction to happen, but they were clearly wrong.
 
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Killjoy-NL

Gold Member
Nvm, obvious is obvious.

MS can't manage their studios. Them ever buying Nintendo would be a massive waste.
 
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calistan

Member
Slow news day at Bloomberg or why are they wasting webspace on shit like this?
Bloomberg is not above providing fanboy opinion pieces, or getting led on a merry chase up its own arse by entirely dubious sources. Never trust anything they write on there. Remember the 'Chinese spy chips' story they wrote a few years ago, caused a big stink, then they just shut up about it and were completely unable/unwilling to provide any evidence.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...ny-chip-to-infiltrate-america-s-top-companies
 
It's funny how when Nintendo got into the bag of future purchases of M$ and the consolidation of the market would be a disaster, wasn't these purchases good for the players? This is what is read daily in forums and Twitter, but it seems not to be.
 
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