Call of Duty: Vanguard didnât meet Activisionâs projections. | Image: Activision Blizzard
There has been a new mainline Call of Duty title every year since 2005, but that will apparently change next year. Activision Blizzard is delaying a Call of Duty title that had been scheduled to release in 2023, according to Bloombergâs Jason Schreier.
Activision is pushing the game, which Schreier says is being developed by Call of Duty: Black Ops maker Treyarch, after last yearâs annual release, Call of Duty: Vanguard, didnât meet expectations. That led executives to âsuspect that it had been cannibalized by the previous yearâs game,â Schreier reports. A recent SEC filing said that Vanguard failed to meet Activisionâs fourth-quarter projections.
However, it seems that Activision will release other Call of Duty content. The 2022 title, which Activision has already announced will be a sequel to 2019âs Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, will get âa steady stream of additional content,â Schreier says. Thereâs also a new free-to-play online game that will be available in 2023 as well, and it appears that will be in addition to the eventual release of Warzone 2, a game that Schreier mentioned in a tweet.
An Activision spokesperson didnât immediately reply to a request for comment.
A new premium Call of Duty has come out every year since 2005. Next year’s offerings will include a new free-to-play game as well as content for Warzone 2 and 2022’s Modern Warfare.
â Jason Schreier (@jasonschreier) February 22, 2022
Activision announced initial details about the Modern Warfare sequel and a ânew Warzone experienceâ (which is perhaps the Warzone 2 Schreier mentioned) earlier in February, and both are scheduled to come out this year. While Activision said they will be âdesigned together from the ground-up,â itâs unclear if the new Warzone is a full sequel or a big update to the existing game. Both will be powered by a new engine.
Activision has been under significant scrutiny due to Californiaâs lawsuit alleging it fostered a culture of âconstant sexual harassmentâ and labor protests from staffers, including some who work on Call of Duty. Microsoft announced in January it had struck a deal to acquire the company for $68.7 billion, though the deal isnât expected to close until sometime in Microsoftâs fiscal year 2023, which begins in July.