Microsoft has been trying a new strategy to get the Activision deal through--punching itself in the face repeatedly. Today that means admitting it has "lost the console wars," AKA that it's falling behind Nintendo and PlayStation, so buying up Activision Blizzard King 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:won't really harm the competition. It's a bold strategy Cotton, let's see if it pays off for 'em. "Xbox and Activision Both Face Intense Competition," the document opens. "Xbox has lost the console wars, and its rivals are positioned to continue to dominate, including by leveraging exclusive content. Xbox has consistently ranked third in consoles behind PlayStation and Nintendo."RELATED: 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Maybe Xb꧂ox Is Righ🍸t Not To Jump Into VR Just YetT🍸his part of the document was first noticed by Verge senior editor Tom Warren, who tweeted, "Microsoft reveals Xbox had 16 percent share of console sales in 2021 and 21 percent of the console inst🧸all base", leaving 79 percent between PlayStation and Nintendo. That does slot it into the third place, but positioning the 'console war' as something tangible you can lose rather than a toxic gamer term is still a strange choice.

168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The idea of the 'console war' imagines gamers as devoted fans of a singular ❀platform. It's led to insults like Xbot and Sony Pony, the idea being that you're a dedicated fanboy who shills for one side over the other even if that side is making terrible games and decisions. In reality, your average gamer doesn't care. They buy whatever console their friends are on or has the games they want to play. It's the extremely vocal internet types who subscribe to the idea that there's some kind of 'war' going on--imagine if we had 'Soda Wars' for Coke vs Pepsi types, or 'Streaming Wars' between people who subscribe to Netflix or Amazon Prime. It's silly.

The ones who believe in the 'console war' are the ones who uphold the ideals, like yelling at every single person who criticises your console or praises the competition. Expectedly, this leads to all kinds of𒐪 harassment and abuse, creating camps of very online gamers who think a billionaire business that sells a different version of the same thing their competitor sells cares. Apparently, Xbox does. Or at least, it does so much in that it wants to buy Activision and needs an argument.

Next: The Lack Of Women At Summer Game Fest Points To A Bigger Problem I𒁏n The Industry