Bungie shocked the video gaming world when it announced that it had cut ties with Activision, the longtime publisher of the Destiny franchise. And not only did the two split up, but Bungie was able to retain full ownership of the Destiny intellectual property. Meanwhile, reports have been shooting around suggesting things aren’t so hot over at Blizzard. Before any of this drama, several licenses, such as Marvel, left Activision for one reason or another. With the exception of Call of Duty, the titanic publisher seems to be hemorrhaging good will, IP, and even people. Is that bad for Activision? Or video games? Does Activision even care?

Out of all the long-running developers out there, Activision’s tune hasn’t really changed along with the times, especially when it comes to the emergent “games as service” models. It has certainly dipped its toes in things like microtransactions and loot boxes, which you can see in the latest Call of Duty, but generally speaking the publisher has stuck to its guns with annualized release models. Each year sees a new Call of Duty, a new kids-oriented game (previously Skylanders, now ostensibly things like Crash and Spyro), and until recently, Destiny. Meanwhile word on the street is that Blizzard is under pressure to make more games and spend less money. Also, Bungie is gone.

Looking at the bigger picture with Destiny is telling enough. Clearly, Bungie wanted to make a service game all along. Destiny was pitched as this nebulous thing that was going to be a ten-year run or something like that, but then when it finally dropped, it had Activision Release Model written all over it. Bungie was sort of pigeon-holed into dropping expansions like Destiny is some sort of World of Warcraft-chaser, and then Destiny 2 was a thing that had to happen, with its own set of drama. Meanwhile, towards the end of the relationship, Bungie is clearly sowing seeds to move to the original service plan.

With the yearly pass, and phasing out even asking for money for the older expansions before Forsaken, Destiny 2 is poised to transition from a “sequel,” to a platform. It’s obviously super early in this new world, and past agreements and structure may make it impossible to carry on with the Activision-released software as the platform. A re-branding may be inevitable. But will that be called Destiny 3? I wouldn’t be surprised if it wasn’t. But back to the topic at hand, which is Activision and its struggling identity outside of “corporate malfeasance.”

Looking at the bigger picture with Destiny is telling enough. Clearly, Bungie wanted to make a service game all along. Destiny was pitched as this nebulous thing that was going to be a ten-year run or something like that, but then when it finally dropped, it had Activision Release Model written all over it. Bungie was sort of pigeon-holed into dropping expansions like Destiny is some sort of World of Warcraft-chaser, and then Destiny 2 was a thing that had to happen, with its own set of drama. Meanwhile, towards the end of the relationship, Bungie is clearly sowing seeds to move to the original service plan.

With the yearly pass, and phasing out even asking for money for the older expansions before Forsaken, Destiny 2 is poised to transition from a “sequel,” to a platform. It’s obviously super early in this new world, and past agreements and structure may make it impossible to carry on with the Activision-released software as the platform. A re-branding may be inevitable. But will that be called Destiny 3? I wouldn’t be surprised if it wasn’t. But back to the topic at hand, which is Activision and its struggling identity outside of “corporate malfeasance.”