U.S. Justice Department settles with Activision over esports salary limits


A view shows Blizzard Entertainment's campus, after Microsoft Corp announced the purchase of Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion in the biggest gaming industry deal in history, in Irvine, California, U.S., January 18, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Justice Department agreed to a settlement with Activision Blizzard to resolve the department's lawsuit filed on Monday over salary limits in professional esports leagues.

The department said in its lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Washington that Activision Blizzard Inc, which owns leagues built around its "Overwatch" and "Call of Duty" video games, and the independently owned teams imposed a tax that "effectively operated as a salary cap, penalized teams for paying esports players above a certain threshold and limited player compensation in these leagues."

The Justice Department complaint said Activision dropped plans for salary limits in October 2021.

Activision said in a statement, "The tax was never levied, and the leagues voluntarily dropped it from our rules in 2021.

"We have always believed, and still believe, that the Competitive Balance Tax was lawful, and it did not have an adverse impact on player salaries," it added.

Under the settlement, which still must be approved by a federal judge, Activision agreed to refrain from putting any caps or limits on salaries of esports players or teams, the department said.

The Justice Department noted an estimated 60% of Americans report they play video games on a weekly basis -- and millions like to watch video games played by professionals.

The "Overwatch" and "Call of Duty" leagues have generated hundreds of millions of dollars from franchise fees, sponsorship revenues, exclusive streaming deals and a television broadcast deal for Activision drawing millions of viewers, the government said.

(Reporting by Diane Bartz; additional reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Mark Porter and Jonathan Oatis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

TikTok artists and advertisers to stay with app until 'door slams shut'
TikTok to suspend TikTok Lite's reward programme amid EU concerns
ASML approves Christophe Fouquet as CEO at annual meeting
AT&T beats estimates for subscriber additions, free cash flow
Exclusive-Google rival Tuta complains to EU tech regulators about de-ranking
Microsoft's AI lead puts Amazon cloud dominance on watch
TE Connectivity beats quarterly profit estimates on sensor demand
UK watchdog seeks views on Microsoft's and Amazon's AI partnerships
Texas Instruments' upbeat Q2 forecast pushes chip stocks higher
Italy fines Amazon over ‘recurring’ purchase option

Others Also Read