Call of Duty’s mostly radio-silent social media presence since the holiday season was broken today after Activision posted a 2,700-word update addressing numerous player complaints.
The hope for now is that Warzone’s season two will be lackluster in the content department as a sacrifice for a bigger and better future throughout the rest of the year. Activision just has to hope ...
Fans are concerned that the return of Verdansk in Call of Duty: Warzone won't capture the magic of its original release in ...
Financial writer highlights Microsoft Corporation's growth under Satya Nadella, with strong AI services and projected $870 ...
Meanwhile, the Justice Department is absolutely loving this. The Supreme Court's decision will allow it to "prevent the ...
The US Supreme Court's decision to upheld the law banning TikTok have brought all eyes on the estimated worth of the social ...
Since Scump is getting his own skin in Off The Grid, Call of Duty fans urged the devs to follow suit with the same treatment, ...
Wedbush analyst explains why Tencent is a suitable buyer of Ubisoft. He also expects Saudi Arabia's Savvy Games Group to bid ...
Psychologists hope move against the app could turn spotlight on social media addiction but Trump and would-be buyers may have ...
The supremely popular TikTok could be banned on Jan. 19 under a federal law that forces the video sharing platform to divest ...
While the majority of outlets pump out all their Game of the Year coverage before the actual end of the year, we've elected ...
The Supreme Court has upheld a new law that could ban TikTok in the U.S. unless its Chinese parent company divests from the ...