HomeNewsOpinionMicrosoft buying Nintendo would have been a disaster

Microsoft buying Nintendo would have been a disaster

It’s tricky to imagine a greater clash of cultures: Nintendo executives famously cut their own salaries rather than lay off workers while Microsoft just laid off 10,000 workers earlier this year, before reporting record revenue. Microsoft has a decades-long history of seemingly smart but ultimately poorly managed acquisitions, from Skype to Nokia

September 27, 2023 / 09:33 IST
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Microsoft has acknowledged the leaked documents, but says “much has changed” since they were written.

Microsoft Corp’s video-game head Phil Spencer might have been correct when he wrote, in a piece of corporate cringe straight out of HBO’s Succession, that acquiring Nintendo Co would be a “career moment” for him.

Spencer’s dream of buying the venerable Japanese firm was revealed, alongside other confidential plans, in an accidental leak of emails related to Microsoft’s video-game operations recently uploaded to a federal court website. The email concerning Nintendo is dated 2020; Microsoft has acknowledged the leaked documents, but says “much has changed” since they were written.

What hasn’t changed is Nintendo’s undoubted attractiveness as an asset. Even after Microsoft completes the $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard Inc, it could no doubt afford the purchase. But even if Spencer somehow convinced Nintendo’s board to agree, and assuming such a deal cleared antitrust regulators, it’s hard to conclude it would be, as he wrote, “a good move for both companies.”

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Indeed, it’s tricky to imagine a greater clash of cultures. Executives at the Japanese firm famously cut their own salaries rather than lay off workers during the failure of the Wii U; Microsoft just laid off 10,000 workers earlier this year, before reporting record revenue. The Redmond-based firm has a decades-long history of seemingly smart but ultimately poorly managed acquisitions, from Skype to Nokia.

Spencer notes that the Nintendo board “until recently has not pushed for further increases in market growth or stock appreciation,” something that, to the despair of frustrated Nintendo bulls, is true. The video-game maker stubbornly marches to the beat of its own drum; shareholders are just one consideration.