Microsoft agrees with Boosteroid to bring Xbox games for PC to its cloud in the next decade

Microsoft has announced a new agreement with Boosteroid to bring Xbox games for PC to its cloud over the next ten years, including titles from Bethesda and Activision Blizzard, such as the well-known shooter Call of Duty.

In recent weeks, the company has closed collaborations with different companies and developers to ensure the presence of its video games on different consoles and online platforms.

These movements are due to the purchase agreement of Activision Blizzard by the Xbox manufacturer that organizations such as the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) are currently reviewing.

While waiting for a resolution, in which either Microsoft might benefit or Sony, which opposes the purchase of the American developer, might benefit, Microsoft has decided to act and sign agreements with different companies.

One of them has been Nintendo, with whom it has agreed to bring Activision Blizzard’s star video game – and the main reason for the dispute between the American and Japanese technology companies – to their consoles for the next ten years.

The availability of Xbox games for PC and Activision Blizzard is also locked in for the next decade on Nvidia GeForce Now, a deal it unveiled just a day following the first.

The company has now announced that its video games will also be present for the next ten years in the Boosteroid cloud thanks to an agreement that “will allow Activision Blizzard’s PC titles to be streamed by Boosteroid customers following the acquisition closes.” from Activision Blizzard.

The independent provider of games in the cloud, of Ukrainian origin, has also recalled that Microsoft has recently added support for the language of this country for Xbox, PC and ‘apps’. In the spring of this year, in addition, Microsoft will launch PC Game Pass in Ukraine.

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