SAN FRANCISCO -- Before becoming
Zynga's new CEO earlier
this month, Don Mattrick tried to buy the company when he was head of
Microsoft's Xbox division, according to a published report.
Mattrick and Zynga founder and CEO Mark Pincus started negotiating a possible
acquisition by Microsoft in 2010, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources
"with knowledge of the matter."
The talks later fell apart, but Mattrick and Pincus stayed in touch. In
March, the relationship got more serious as the two started going on bike rides
together and discussing potential opportunities for Mattrick at Pincus'
company.
Microsoft's effort to buy Zynga wasn't previously
This undated photo provided
by GlobeNewswire shows Zynga's new CEO Don Mattrick, right, with Zynga's
founding CEO Mark Pincus. (AP Photo/GlobeNewswire)
(Uncredited)
disclosed. The purpose of the purchase would have
been to boost the Xbox's game lineup at a time when Microsoft's game console was
vying with Nintendo's Wii, which was known for its casual games, for leadership
of the gaming market.
Zynga and Microsoft representatives declined to comment on the report or
confirm its details.
San Francisco-based Zynga announced this month that Mattrick would replace
Pincus as its CEO. In the past two years, Zynga has struggled with disappointing
earnings, declining popularity of its
Facebook games, the
departure of numerous executives, at last two rounds of mass layoffs, a plunging
stock price and, most recently, falling sales.
Mattrick
comes to the company after leading Microsoft's games division from being a
chronically unprofitable business to one that is making money and leading the
U.S. market in sales. Before that, he served as president at
Electronic
Arts (ERTS).
In 2007, the same year he joined Microsoft, Mattrick and some other former EA
employees founded BigPark, which specialized in free casual games for the Web.
Two years later, Microsoft purchased BigPark.
Contact Troy Wolverton at 408-840-4285. Follow him at
Twitter.com/troywolv.
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