Update: Activision has reached out to IGN with a statement on the report that 2023’s Call of Duty release was being delayed to 2024.
“We have an exciting slate of premium and free-to-play Call of Duty experiences for this year, next year and beyond. Reports of anything otherwise are incorrect. We look forward to sharing more details when the time is right.”
IGN has followed up with Activision to ask if this was a direct denial of the claims in the Bloomberg piece that specifically the typical major November Call of Duty release in 2023 would be delayed to 2024, and will update this story accordingly.
Original story:
The typical annual Call of Duty release planned for 2023 has reportedly been delayed into 2024.
According to Bloomberg, sources familiar with the situation, executives in charge of the franchise have made the decision early after “a recent entry in the series failed to meet expectations,” leading them to believe that Call of Duty’s current annual cadence of releases was too rapid. The decision is reportedly unrelated to the recent Microsoft purchase of the publisher, and the 2022 Call of Duty release is still on track.
The “recent entry” is most likely Call of Duty: Vanguard, which faced release competition with Battlefield 2042 this past holiday season, as well as the free-to-play Call of Duty: Warzone. A previous report noted that Vanguard’s sales had also been suffering due to players feeling fatigued at Call of Duty’s constant release cadence, making them less interested in buying a new entry every year.
The annual Call of Duty release has traditionally been one of gaming’s biggest moneymakers, typically topping sales charts in the US at launch and remaining in the top ten year-round. With a massive sales gap now looming, Activision is reportedly working on other projects to fill in the gap such as ongoing content for 2022’s Call of Duty release and a separate new, free-to-play online game that’s as yet unannounced.