This is a big deal. Microsoft and Sony are buying Bungie, the developer of the popular video game Destiny. Bungie is a company that has been making games for consoles for years, and it’s one of the most popular game developers in the world. The deal is likely to be very beneficial to both Microsoft and Sony. Bungie is known for its innovative gameplay mechanics, and it has a lot of experience in developing games for consoles. This will give both companies a lot of valuable experience in the development process, which will help them to create better games over time. Bungie also has a lot of talent behind it. The team behind Destiny includes some of the best developers in the business, and they’re all experienced in creating high-quality games. This will give Microsoft and Sony plenty of ideas for new games to develop, which will be more successful than any other projects they might have been working on before this purchase.


This comes hot on the heels of Microsoft announcing that it has purchased Activision Blizzard for the tidy sum of $68.7 billion. While Bungie’s catalog might be substantially smaller than that of Activision Blizzard, the company still makes Destiny, a successful multiplatform franchise that’s been around since 2014 (Destiny 2 since 2017).

The second sentence of Sony’s announcement answers one of the biggest questions gamers will have, and that’s whether they’ll still be able to play Destiny on Xbox and PC. “First off, I want to be very clear to the community that Bungie will remain an independent and multiplatform studio and publisher,” said Jim Ryan, President & CEO, Sony Interactive Entertainment.

It sounds like Sony might look to Bungie for more than just Destiny, as well. Ryan continues, “Bungie’s world-class expertise in multiplatform development and live game services will help us deliver on our vision of expanding PlayStation to hundreds of millions of gamers. Bungie is a great innovator and has developed incredible proprietary tools that will help PlayStation Studios achieve new heights under Hermen Hulst’s leadership.”

That sounds like the technology Bungie created to bring the persistent world of Destiny 2 to life might see some use in PlayStation’s other games.

Interestingly, Bungie is responsible for Microsoft’s first big success on Xbox, Halo. Bungie then went to work with Activision before going independent. Now, the firm has made a 180-degree turn, going to Sony.

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