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Activision in Financial Trouble

by Mike Sklens - March 11, 2004, 10:19 pm EST
Total comments: 9 Source: Milburg Weiss

Looks like the publisher may have a rough road ahead.

Law firm Milburg Weiss has posted a notice on their website to investors who own shares of Activision stock. The investing group Construction Industry and Carpenters Joint Pension Trust for Southern Nevada has filed a complaint against game publisher Activision alleging that the company violated federal securities law. Several officers and directors of Activision have also been individually targeted.

The complaint alleges that Activision misrepresented their financial records in order to boost their stock value. In layman’s terms this means that Activision is just another on the list of companies that have been charged with "cooking" their financial books.

Investors who purchased shares of Activision stock between February 1, 2001 and December 17, 2002 may qualify to be part of the legal class action.

Talkback

RABicleMarch 12, 2004

Tough. Activision tried to cheat, they couldn't do it. Too bad, I can't think of a single game I would care for losing if they went broke.
EDIT: Wait yes I can! all those endless extreme sport titles. no wait I don't care about those games either.

Bartman3010March 12, 2004

They were pretty big in the 32/64 bit age, at least in the end...throwing out shoddy ports on the Nintendo 64...

thecubedcanuckMarch 12, 2004

Activision makes the worst sports titles.

Infernal MonkeyMarch 12, 2004

And to think the last game I really enjoyed from Activision was Activision Anthology on PS2.. A collection of their Atari 2600 games.. Odd.

couchmonkeyMarch 12, 2004

I thought the Spider-Man games were excellent. Too short, but excellent.
Anyway, I don't know if this really signals the demise of Activision, going by its stock price (even if it is inflated) and the popularity of some of its games (particularly Tony Hawk) the company appears to be in better shape than, say, Acclaim or Interplay - if Interplay is still around, I may be making that up.

vuduMarch 12, 2004

isn't call of duty published by activision? that was a great game; probably the best fps i've played since half-life.

KDR_11kMarch 12, 2004

Someone else will pick it up.

ArbokMarch 12, 2004

I actually liked Bloody Roar: Primal Fury quite a bit, still play it from time to time on my cube, however that was developed by Hudson anyway, Activision only published it in the US, so...

Ian SaneMarch 12, 2004

Activision is one of the few American publishers that consistently releases titles that are actually pretty good. When it came out the original Tony Hawk's Pro Skater was one of the best games I had ever played. However I have significantly lost interest in them after they decided the Tony Hawk games had to be released EVERY YEAR like a Madden game without roster updates. I think THUG is a great game but I only rented it because I already have THPS3 for the Cube so I don't need another very similar game so soon after. I haven't even played THPS4 because of this.

So basically what I'm saying is that Activision is a pretty good publisher/developer but if they went under I wouldn't consider it a huge loss. Though I think that it's only right if THQ, Acclaim, and Midway go first. I'll allow EA to stay for now because Def Jam Vendetta was pretty swank.

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