After being gone for more than a year, Blizzard's biggest games will soon return to China. Blizzard confirmed tonight that it has to bring all the games covered by the previous publishing agreement, including World of Warcraft, Hearthstone, "and other titles in the Warcraft, Overwatch, Diablo, and StarCraft universes," back to the Chinese market. The new deal will take effect this summer.
"We at Blizzard are thrilled to reestablish our partnership with NetEase and to work together, with deep appreciation for the collaboration between our teams, to deliver legendary gaming experiences to players in China," Blizzard president Johanna Faries said in a statement. "We are immensely grateful for the passion the Chinese community has shown for Blizzard games throughout the years, and we are focused on bringing our universes back to players with excellence and dedication."
A short time later, the reported the same thing, citing "a person familiar with the matter" and "local media reports." The SCMP report echoed CN Wire in saying that the new deal will be announced on April 10, but claimed that Blizzard's games won't actually return to China for at least another month.
Now it's official, and it's not an entirely unexpected outcome: Activision Blizzard has said multiple times since the expiration of the NetEase deal that it remains "" to the Chinese market. But it may have been the rummy 51 company's acquisition by Microsoft, approved by the Chinese government in May 2023 ahead of both the UK's Competitions and Markets Authority and the US Federal Trade Commission (which is still ), that helped finally get a deal done.
"Blizzard and NetEase have done incredible work to renew our commitment to players—Blizzard's universes have been part of players' lives in the region for many years," Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer said. "Returning Blizzard's legendary games to players in China while exploring ways to bring more new titles to Xbox demonstrates our commitment to bringing more games to more players around the world."
Microsoft has also struck a separate deal with NetEase "to explore bringing new NetEase titles to Xbox consoles and other platforms."