KEY POINTS
  • Brad Smith, Microsoft's vice-chairman and president, told CNBC the company "really tried to take concerns to heart" before submitting its fresh takeover proposal of American game publisher Activision Blizzard earlier in August.
  • U.K. regulators rejected Microsoft's initial $69 billion offer as the deal raised anti-competitive concerns in the nascent cloud gaming market.
  • "It will be up to the regulators to decide whether that path is clear," said Smith.

Microsoft says it "really tried" to take the concerns of U.K. regulators to heart, before launching its fresh bid to take over Activision Blizzard — and it's now up to the regulators to decide whether that path is clear.

"I think we need to let the regulators speak for themselves," Microsoft's vice-chairman and president Brad Smith told CNBC in an exclusive interview. "They have decisions that need to be made, especially in the U.K., but from my vantage point, what we've really tried to do is take these concerns to heart."