Activision Blizzard saw its stock price drop nearly 4% this week after the U.S. video game maker’s move to ban a star gamer for publicly expressing support for Hong Kong protesters prompted outrage and calls for boycotts from the online gaming community.
Activision Blizzard stock price dips as video game players call for boycotts
Video game players and developers have taken to social media platforms like Reddit and Twitter to express their displeasure with Activision Blizzard, whose popular titles include “Call of Duty” and “World of Warcraft.” Hashtags for #BoycottBlizzard have been trending on Twitter.”It’s really unlike anything I’ve seen in games, which I’ve been competing or designing or commenting on for 20 years now, and this is by far the biggest incident I’ve seen,” said Brian Kibler, a broadcaster for online video games.
Kibler was slated to host an online broadcast of the tournament finals for Hearthstone, the same game that Hong Kong player Ng Wai Chung was competing in, at Blizzard’s biggest annual video game convention next month. But he said he pulled out in protest of Blizzard’s decision to ban Chung, known in gaming circles as “Blitzchung,” from the Hearthstone Grandmaster card game for a year after Chung shouted “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times” last weekend during a post-game interview with two Taiwanese online video game show hosts. Blizzard also seized Chung’s earnings from the tournament, which amounted to $10,000. As of November 2016, Chinese technology giant Tencent had a 4.9% stake in Activision Blizzard. Some players now appear to be withdrawing from Blizzard’s platforms — or at least considering it. Some reported having trouble deleting their Blizzard accounts. Blizzard’s customer support feed on Twitter said Wednesday that its engineers are addressing a bug that’s causing users trying to cancel their accounts to get a message that says “too many attempts.”Blizzard did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Shares of the company have gained ground since slumping earlier this week. Activision counting on China growthThe controversy comes as Activision is struggling to boost results at Blizzard, which primarily makes games for PCs. The stock has been largely flat this year, but fell 26% in 2018.Activision merged with Blizzard as part of a deal with Vivendi in 2008. Blizzard’s titles last year made up just over 30% of Activision’s overall $7.2 billion in sales. But sales, led by its aging World of Warcraft game, have been falling. Even before the Hearthstone brouhaha, analysts had expected Blizzard’s revenue to slump 28% this year to $1.7 billion. Hearthstone alone generated $385 million in sales in 2018, a figure forecast to drop to just over $300 million this year. Blizzard is supposed to announce new titles at its upcoming gaming confab early next month.