Following rumors that the official sequel to Destiny would not arrive in time for its previously announced September 2016 window, Activision made the news formal as part of its Q4 fiscal report on Thursday.

The news of Destiny 2's "2017" release window—with no month or quarter mentioned—also came with the announcement of a previously unmentioned "large new expansion," which Activision "expects" to launch this year. No name or release window was included with that news. That may very well be bad news for Destiny's "25+ million registered users" that Activision bragged about in its statement, who the company says have logged "nearly 3 billion hours" inside of the game—and who are avidly complaining about a wave of underwhelming limited-time "events" in the game, particularly this week's Valentine's themed snoozer.

Activision announced good sales news for Call of Duty: Black Ops III, which it dubbed "the number one console game globally for the calendar year." The company claims to have released "four of the top ten games on next-generation consoles life-to-date," including CODBLOPS3 in the top position. In absolutely shocking and world-shaking news, Activision said gamers could expect another Call of Duty game by the end of 2016—to be designed by Infinity Ward.

Continued development of the Guitar Hero franchise may not be guaranteed, however, as Activision took the opportunity to disclose that both the latest Guitar Hero Live release and the latest round of Skylanders games and toys "performed weaker than expected, we believe largely due to greater competition in the toys-to-life genre and due to the casual audience’s shift to mobile devices." The financial report didn't disclose exactly how much Activision lost due to physical products like plastic guitars and toys—presumably not as much as Mad Catz—but the report did point out excitement for its impending $5.9 billion acquisition of the mobile-minded King, makers of every Candy Crush game imaginable.