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Taco News – Activision to Sell Games in Lootboxes

This article is over 7 years old and may contain outdated information

Reality can be stranger than fiction; what follows is written too much like reality to be real, and instead lands somewhere beyond irony, beyond reality, but just south of memes.

In a messy, frantic newsroom, a newsie sprints across the cheap carpet and blasts through the cheap plywood door of the editor’s office. Small shards of wood litter the ground, and an editor shaped suspiciously like a Taco asks the newsie what he has. “New report from the internet this morning, sir?” The Taco frowns pensively, “You shouldn’t believe everything you read on the internet, kid. That place is full of lies; run it on the website.”


Payment for this article was given in the form of a lootbox.

With the inclusion of loot boxes in several large triple-A games, the next evolution was inevitably going to follow. Today, Activision has announced that not only will future games continue to integrate loot boxes into their games, but what game you buy will be in the form of a loot box.

We sat down with CEO Bobby Kotick, while passing interns offered us drinks. After a quick coffee order, we started the interview proper. “We’ve made it possible for gamers to experience that feeling of joy of getting that new weapon or emote and fused it with the act of buying the game itself.”

Kotick went into more detail about how the system would work. The attendant came back with five mystery glasses, we selected one, it was a Mountain Dew Code Red.

“For physical copies, we’ve sent retailers an actual box which can contain anything from the actual game you want to buy to a coupon for $5 off Blizzard games. Customers who prefer digital copies won’t be left out, the store will generate a code which again has a range of possibilities. We really want players to get the joy of experiencing surprise every time their open their wallets. Every game is like a surprise party for your wallet.”

“We’re also looking into integrating micro-transactions into the gameplay to a higher degree. For the Call of Duty fan, this might come in the form of buying Specialist Bullets which are regular bullets but with a fancy casing. Or that makes money appear as they fire through the air, which tested very well with sniping enthusiasts in our focus groups. Our camping division also praised the new Teabag Sprays; we have something for everyone here.”

While the announcement was met with a mixed reaction, some developers looked at the news more positively. We bought seven blanked out magazines sitting in the Activision lobby, most of which were outdated car magazines or Playboys, but the last of which was a copy of a game development magazine. Overwatch designer Scott Mercer had this to say:

“Gaming is always about showing off what you got, it’s just easier now to spend money on it rather than grinding to get it. This replaces the time factor with a money factor and I’m firmly in the opinion that time is more valuable than money. As long as the act of opening the box is cool, people will spend as much as they can so they can have the most unique loot that money can buy.”

Be on the lookout for the Activision Gaming Press Starter Kit which includes a pre-written 10/10 review score and a trial code for three free loot boxes.

As soon as we find the box with that press kit in it.

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