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2023 won’t get a new main Call Of Duty, report claimsActivision have released a main series game every year since 2005

Activision have released a main series game every year since 2005

A squad pose for a Call of Duty: Warzone screenshot.

Call Of Duty launching a new sequel every year is a tradition older than the CoD players who tell me they’ve had sex with my mother. But this tradition may break next year, according to an unconfirmed report. Supposedly Activision have delayed next year’s game, leaving 2023 without a shiny new main series game. That doesn’t mean 2023 won’t have any new CoD, mind.

Warzone Gulag + Loadout Drops = Best Battle Royale | My Fav Thing In (Call Of Duty Warzone Gameplay)Watch on YouTube

Warzone Gulag + Loadout Drops = Best Battle Royale | My Fav Thing In (Call Of Duty Warzone Gameplay)

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Activision have released a new game in the main series every year since 2005, started with Call Of Duty 2. While that run will continue this year witha sequel to 2019’s Modern Warfare reboot, next year it might break.

Bloomberg say the Modern Warfare sequel will receive new content into 2023, as is customary. They also claim that a new free-to-play online CoD is coming in 2023. It’s not clear if that’s referring to the “new Warzone experience” Activision announced alongside Modern Warfare 2, which was expected in 2022, or if it’s something else. Supposedly Treyarch will chip in on the F2P game too.

All this is still only rumour, but it’d be interesting. Activision have always felt old-fashioned with CoD. They stuck with playerbase-splitting paid map packs long after other games binned them as the horrible things they are. Other companies largely stepped back from annual sequels long ago too, sports games aside. CoD has still made heaps of money, but it’d be sensible to question how much longer that can last without paying attention to the industry changing around them.

“We have an exciting slate of premium and free-to-play Call of Duty experiences for this year, next year and beyond,” Activision PR told Bloomberg in response to the report. “We look forward to sharing more details when the time is right.”

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