This is why I don't have a dedicated HM slave in my party, instead I spread the HMs out so that even my HM mons can have some time to shine in battle.Bidoof's Big Stand
It makes sense if they want to grow their Live Gaming library though. Getting older, classic titles running on modern Windows systems via Live Gaming would give them a very big edge, especially when it's suddenly stuff no one else can get modern sequels to.I mean, that is big news... but mostly the story is that Microsoft keeps spending a LOT of money to buy game devs that peaked over a decade ago and have been coasting on their laurels ever since *cough*Mojang*cough*
That's the big one, sure, but there's some other notables.Other than Halo, is there any other brand closely associated with Microsoft?
But not Half-Life! At least we can rest assured that future Half-Life FPS games will not come out under the Microsoft banner!They basically own the FPS genre now: Doom, Halo, COD
I still don't have access to a company Onedrive account (4 weeks in) so I have no idea.I have ten times as many complaints about onedrive as I do about Teams.
Bungie split from them in 2007, but left Halo with Microsoft. It then joined Activision Blizzard for about a decade, before leaving over mismanagement of it's Destiny franchise by Activision.Wait what? Wasn't Bungie part of Microsoft?
Bungie was purchased by Microsoft back when it was still young and developing Halo, but then after the original Halo Trilogy, they decided they wanted to move on and develop Destiny, so they made a deal with Microsoft to let them go independent as long as Microsoft got to keep Halo. (This is what started Halo's current developer, 343 Industries.) After that, Bungie formed a partnership with Activision to develop Destiny and Destiny 2, but after Bungie realized Activision was not doing much for them, they used an escape clause in their contract to leave the partnership while retaining Destiny. Now they are being purchased by Sony.Wait what? Wasn't Bungie part of Microsoft?
Liar.I can't wait for the entire video game industry to be consolidated to 3 companies.