- Complete Schedule of DWP Christmas 2025 Payment Dates
- Teen Dies Following Car Flip in Baildon Accident
- Poppers and condoms discovered in bathroom post-Andrew’s Sandringham bash
- Massive blaze at Methil Harbour: Several lorries in flames
- Hero neighbor rescues family just before home engulfed in flames
- Family grieves motorcyclist lost in collision with van | UK News
- UK to ban puppy farms and trail hunting in major animal welfare reform
- Prison Brawl Involves Stephen Lawrence’s Killer and Manchester Bomber
Browsing: video games
The Friday letters page offers advice for keeping track of your video game backlog, as one reader praises indie game Cocoon.
The latest entry in Sega’s popular strategy series goes back further in time than ever before, to Ancient Egypt and the Bronze Age Collapse.
Box art for Princess Peach: Showtime! has been altered so that Peachy looks more like her appearance in The Super Mario Bros. Movie.
GameCentral looks back at Sony’s earlier Spider-Man games and the importance of the new sequel to their increasingly barren release schedules.
The Thursday letters page contemplates the idea of Disney buying EA, as one reader offers some very detailed advice on racing wheels.
Starfield has been out for a month now, and sifting through reviews, ratings, and charts reveal a mixed reception of the game.
Could EA Sports FC become a Disney property? (pic: Wikipedia)
Bob Iger is being advised to buy EA and all its developers, as Disney considers whether it wants to re-enter the games industry as a major player.
Given their traditional audience, you might have imagined that Disney would’ve been an early pioneer in the video games industry, but they’ve always been strangely disinterested. That level of disinterest has varied over the decades, but they’ve often gone years without any major internal developers and usually just licence out their properties to other companies.
That’s the situation they’re in at the moment, as they licence Star Wars and Marvel to various different publishers. Games based on their classic properties are less common but there’s still things like Disney Dreamlight Valley – even if the last time they tried to make an original title was the (excellent) Split/Second in 2010.
However, it seems they may be having one of their periodic changes of heart, with various execs supposedly pushing the idea of transforming Disney into a ‘gaming giant’ by… acquiring EA.
EA has been the subject of acquisition speculation before, with many worrying that Microsoft’s purchase of Bethesda and Activision Blizzard would lead to other major companies making a grab for any remaining third party publishers.
The idea that that would include Disney is not new, but the problem is that current CEO Bob Iger seems especially ambivalent towards video games and has apparently been noncommittal about the prospect of buying EA, despite the advice of his deputies.
Although it’s no longer the only publisher using the licence, EA has been making Star Wars games for almost a decade now and also recently got the licence to make games based on Marvel characters, including Black Panther and Iron Man.
This is especially true as Marvel is reported to be planning an ‘internal shift’ to focus more on video games. Although it’s unclear whether that’s related to this latest talk of buying EA.
In that sense an acquisition would make a lot of sense, but Iger has already ignored one opportunity to foster in-house game development, after immediately selling off the FoxNext games division when Disney bought 20th Century Fox.
At that time, he said: ‘We’ve just decided that the best place for us to be in that space [i.e. video games] is licensing and not publishing.’
More: TrendingThe video games industry is broken and will not survive for long – Reader’s FeatureThe PS5 Slim is official and costs exactly the same as the originalAll the best Amazon Prime Big Deal Days 2023 video game offers for PS5, Xbox and Switch
There’s no sign that his attitude has changed but the Bloomberg article which highlighted the EA plans is about all of Iger’s various problems at the moment, where he was brought out of retirement to lead Disney but has so far failed to have any positive impact.
If others convince him that buying EA would be a good idea then the video game landscape will see a seismic shift; especially if Disney’s interest in games proves to be as fleeting as usual and EA get a taste of their own medicine, in terms of what usually happens when a larger company buys a smaller one.
Email gamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below, follow us on Twitter, and sign-up to our newsletter.
MORE : EA Sports FC 24 is already bigger than FIFA after best launch ever
MORE : New Kingdom Hearts 4 tease has fans hoping for Marvel and Star Wars
MORE : £30 Ultimate Team pack triggers outrage with EA Sports FC 24 players
Follow Metro Gaming on Twitter and email us at gamecentral@metro.co.uk
To submit Inbox letters and Reader’s Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here.
For more stories like this, check our Gaming page.
Sign up to all the exclusive gaming content, latest releases before they’re seen on the site.Sign upPrivacy Policy »This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
The Wednesday letters page discusses the economics of keeping video games versus selling them, as one reader asks for F1 racing wheel advice.
Games Inbox: EA Sports FC 24 versus FIFA, PSVR2 disappointment, and Elden Ring easy mode The Metro says The Tuesday…
The Tuesday letters page is excited at the prospect of F-Zero returning, as one reader prefers Armored Core 6 to Starfield.
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

