
WorthPlaying writes, "Last year's release of Skylanders: Spyro's Adventure was a surprise hit for Activision. The video game and toy combination was both innovative and fun to play, not to mention a bit addictive. Unlike Nintendo's Pokémon franchise, "collecting them all" in Skylanders meant tracking down the toys in real life in order to use them within the game. With the sequel, Skylanders: Giants, just around the corner, we decided to join other media and Activision reps on a trip to the northern California office of Toys for Bob, the developer behind the Skylanders games, to see the magic behind the plastic."
In an email interview with Canadia Guy Eh, Toys for Bob studio head Paul Yan said the studio is currently developing a “big and ambitious” title in collaboration with both Microsoft and Activision. While Yan didn't reveal specific details, a number of subtle clues have fueled speculation among fans.
Most notably, Yan’s responses throughout the interview were typed in purple — a color long associated with Spyro the Dragon, one of the studio’s most beloved properties. When asked about potential future projects, Yan stated he would “love to work on a new Banjo,” though the phrasing suggested this was not the title currently in development.

Crash Bandicoot 5 was cancelled during development at a studio other than Toys For Bob, based on the latest information.
THPS 3 & 4 canceled for Diablo II Remake, and now Crash 5 canceled, too? Ah yes, we need to focus only on Call of Duty, that's the Activision way.
This is massive shame, especially after recently learning that the NST sold a massive 20 million copies, and 4 sold a better than previously thought 5 million copies, which would have sold more imo if it was priced a tad lower and along side current gen console launch.
This is likely a result of that awful microtransaction fueled non-free-to-play and non-advertised Crash Team Rumble predictably failing

Former Activision studio Toys for Bob partners with Xbox to publish its first game as an indie. This is something of a homecoming, as Microsoft owns Activision.
Manages to buy their freedom especially after all the shit Microsoft has been doing with its studios lately
...
Goes right back to them as partners.
Okaaaaaay...
Xbox’s gaming division seems to still function as 3 semi-autonomous sub-divisions, Xbox Studios, Bethesda and ABK. The three main sub-divisions can seemingly shut down or build studios and set up partnerships independently. This would explain why Bethesda can recently shutdown studios, while ABK spins off one studio, while building a new one. Plus, Toys for Bob could be spun off by ABK, only to immediately re-partner with Microsoft.