What you need to know
- The FTC and Microsoft are 5 days into an evidentiary hearing over Xbox's acquisition of Activision Blizzard King.
- Call of Duty has been at the heart of the FTC's concerns over the acquisition, but Xbox's handling of exclusives after Bethesda's acquisition has drawn some attention, as well.
- Phil Spencer testified that The Elder Scrolls 6 is at least 5+ years away.
- Microsoft's Lawyer, when trying to correct the FTC, accidentally stated that Elder Scrolls 16 was coming in 2026.
The Federal Trade Commission of the US is 5 days into a plea to the federal courts to issue a preliminary injunction against Microsoft to prevent the closure of the Xbox and Activision merger. There's been no shortage of leaks and reveals during the course of this hearing, including an instance where documents detailed acquisition targets for Microsoft including the likes of Bungie, Sega, 11 bit studios, and Supergiant Games. Additional leaks from poorly redacted documents revealed how much Sony had paid to develop some of their first party titles.
During closing arguments today, the lawyer for Microsoft may have been responsible for yet another slip. This time the slip was about The Elder Scrolls 6:
Clearly there is no Elder Scrolls 16 in the works as The Elder Scrolls 6 was only just announced in 2018, but the potential 2026 release date has garnered some attention. Earlier in the hearing when Xbox CEO Phil Spencer took the stand, he was asked about The Elder Scrolls 6 and replied that the game was "at least 5+ years away". This would put a potential release date somewhere around 2028.
Windows Central's take
Obviously closing arguments during a high profile, high stakes court hearing is an atmosphere that can be rife with confusion and errors, so it's entirely likely that the potential 2026 release window was a slip of the tongue and the lawyer for Microsoft is likely no privier to an earlier release date than anybody else. Those of us tuning into the hearing have listened to economists drag on about vertical foreclosures and hypothetical monopolistic formulas for far too long, and while we realize that this probably just a miscommunication, it's still nice to at least smile and run with it until we have an actual set-in stone release window.