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Saudi Arabia & Other Investors Nearing $50 Billion Deal To Buy EA
Game Reviews

Saudi Arabia & Other Investors Nearing $50 Billion Deal To Buy EA

by admin September 27, 2025


A new report claims that Electronic Arts is close to finalizing a deal to go completely private via a $50 billion buyout being put together by a group of investors that includes multiple private-equity companies as well as Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF). The deal could be unveiled as soon as next week.

On September 26, The Wall Street Journal reported that massive video game publisher EA, the company behind popular and lucrative annual sports games like Madden, was currently negotiating a deal with various private equity companies, including Silver Lake, that could be worth nearly $50 billion, according to sources that spoke with the outlet.  The groups involved in the deal include the controversial Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund, which has invested a lot of money in the video game industry over the last few years.

Kotaku has contacted EA about the reported deal.

Update: 9/26/2025: 5:30 p.m. EST: CNBC reports that among the investors is Affinity Partners. Notably, this is an investment company founded in 2021 by Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law. Kushner’s firm relies heavily on money from Saudi Arabia. Original story continues below.

The Wall Street Journal’s report claims that the deal is still being negotiated and discussions over price are still ongoing, but sources say EA could be valued at $50 billion. The outlet claims this would likely be the largest leveraged buyout of a company in history. Previously, the largest similar deal occurred in 2007 when a group of private-equity firms spent $32 billion on buying up Texas utility company TXU. This new reported deal, which has not yet been officially announced by EA or any parties involved, would be nearly twice as big, if you don’t factor in inflation.

If this all goes through, it’s just one more (very) big video game deal that the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund has made in recent years as part of the country’s government, trying to “sportswash” or, in this case, “gamewash” its abysmal human rights reputation and the fact that the nation is still ruled by a literal monarch. In recent years, the PIF has invested billions across multiple gaming companies, including Activision, Blizzard,  Nintendo, Capcom, and Nexon. It also completely owns King of Fighters and Metal Slug publisher SNK Corp, which reportedly led to the devs being forced to add famous soccer player Cristiano Ronaldo to the fighting game Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves earlier this year.

The PIF is run by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and these investments are part of the Saudi Vision 2030 strategy established during Salman’s mid-decade rise to power. While the plan is presented as a way for the country to diversify its oil-centric economy, the reality is much different. Here’s what former Kotaku writer Ian Walker wrote about Salman, the PIF, and Saudi Arabia’s plan in 2022:

In reality, however, Saudi Vision 2030 is largely a propaganda campaign focused on whitewashing Saudi Arabia’s atrocious human rights record. The regressive monarchy seemingly hopes that aligning itself with entertainment industries around the world might loosen the purse strings of businesses wary of investing in the oil-rich country’s economy, especially with the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and the ongoing, U.S.-backed Yemeni genocide still looming overhead.

So yeah, while it might sound nice that EA reportedly won’t answer to stockholders in the near future, the publisher’s potential new owners and investors are much, much worse than some annoying dudes in suits yelling about the number not going up fast enough.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Ubisoft workers raised concerns over alleged deal with Saudi Arabia, says new report
Esports

Ubisoft workers raised concerns over alleged deal with Saudi Arabia, says new report

by admin September 12, 2025


Ubisoft staff raised concerns with management over the company’s alleged dealings with Saudi Arabia.

According to a report by Game File’s Stephen Totilo, published on September 10, 2025, some Ubisoft staff internally questioned the company’s alleged dealings with Saudi Arabia earlier this year, following a report that Ubisoft leaders, including CEO Yves Guillemot, accompanied French president Emmanuel Macron to the country to meet with Saudi crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman (MBS) and other Saudi leaders in 2024.

Game File reported that a representative from Ubisoft’s social and Economic Committee (CSE) directly questioned company management about whether “seeking a contract with a person accused of crimes against humanity for ordering the assassination (including his dismemberment and dissolution in acid) of a journalist, could contribute to the Ubi-bashing the company is currently suffering?”

“Yves Guillemot’s participation in the President of the Republic’s trip, as CEO of a renowned French company in the field of culture and technology, is a contribution by Ubisoft to the development of France’s ‘soft power’,” Ubisoft management allegedly responded, before saying: “We do not comment on rumours.”

Ubisoft management reportedly went on to clarify that it sees a difference between MBS, who the US government found to have directly approved the assassination of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018, and the Public Investment Fund (PIF), Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund.

According to the report, Ubisoft management stated that it did not see the PIF’s money as MBS’s money and that “talking with partners who do not share our democratic values does not mean abandoning them.”

In response, the CSE reportedly called management’s attitude “naive” and noted they didn’t respond to the question regarding the impact that dealings with Saudi Arabia could have on the company’s image.

In January 2025, a month after Guillemot’s trip to Saudi Arabia, French publication Les Echos reported that, according to its sources, Ubisoft had entered into a partnership with Savvy Games Group, owned by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund.

This deal allegedly involved the creation of DLC for Assassin’s Creed Mirage, which Ubisoft developers said in a 2024 AMA (via Rock Paper Shotgun) had been “designed as a standalone experience without any DLC plans.”

While Ubisoft hasn’t confirmed a deal with the Savvy Games Group or Saudi Arabia generally, the company announced on August 23, 2025, that Assassin’s Creed Mirage will receive free DLC later this year, which will be set in ninth-century AlUla (a city in Saudi Arabia).

The DLC was first announced by Guillemot on stage in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, during the New Global Sport Conference.

When asked whether Mirage’s new DLC is funded by the PIF, a Ubisoft spokesperson told Game File:

“This title update to Assassin’s Creed Mirage was made possible thanks to the support of local and international organizations, through access to experts, historians, and resources to ensure the creation of an authentic and accurate setting.”

Update: GamesIndustry.biz reached out to Ubisoft for comment on this story. A spokesperson provided the same response given to Game File. The statement reads:

“For now, we’re not sharing more details beyond that fact that this title update to Assassin’s Creed Mirage was made possible thanks to the support of local and international organizations, through access to experts, historians and resources to ensure the creation of an authentic and accurate setting.”



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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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Ubisoft's deal with Saudi Arabia over free Assassin's Creed Mirage DLC has reportedly seen staff pushback
Game Updates

Ubisoft’s deal with Saudi Arabia over free Assassin’s Creed Mirage DLC has reportedly seen staff pushback

by admin September 12, 2025


Ubisoft workers have raised concerns with company management about a deal with Saudi Arabia to create a free DLC for Assassin’s Creed Mirage set in the country, according to a new report.

Announced with little fanfare – at least, as far as add-ons for pretty prominent games are concerned – on a Saturday morning last month, the free DLC is set to add a new story chapter set in 9th century AlUla later this year. AlUla is an ancient oasis city and governorate in Saudi Arabia, though Ubisoft’s announcement post didn’t mention the country by name.

As detailed in this report from Game File, Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot announced the DLC alongside the online reveal during a speech in Riyadh at a conference put on in conjunction with the Esports World Cup, which the Saudi government are funding.

According to an internal Ubisoft Q&A, which Game File’s Stephen Totilo has published as part of his report, workers at the publisher have demanded answers from management about this partnership with Saudi Arabia. The question from a staffer about the issue specifically cited the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, asking whether Ubisoft execs believed an association with the authoritarian Saudi state could have a negative effect on the company’s image.

While they’ve publicly told IGN that they have creative control over what goes into this DLC, Ubisoft reportedly wouldn’t tell staff anything about how it came to be, simply stating that they don’t comment on “rumours”. They did however, make a distinction between the Saudi government’s Public Investment Fund and Saudi ruler Mohammed bin Salman, the latter being the Public Investment Fund’s chairman and the person who allegedly ordered Khashoggi’s assassination. “The [PIF]’s money is not MBS’s, and talking with partners who do not share our democratic values does not mean abandoning them,” Ubisoft management told workers.

The company also defended Guillemot having travelled to Saudi Arabia in late 2024 alongside French president Emmanuel Macron to meet with Saudi politicians. That was just a “classic diplomatic tool for expanding France’s influence and reach around the world”, according to Ubisoft.

The reported partnership with Ubisoft over Mirage DLC – released at no charge, as is often the case for sizeable add-ons boasting not just new missions, but a totally fresh location to explore – is far from the only gaming-related investment the Saudi government and their associates have made in recent years. Just last week, PIF-backed “giga project” Qiddiya bought co-ownership of fighting game tournament Evo.



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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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8th September video games roundup: Scrutinising the Saudi takeover of Evo, and Ghost of Yotei has the nicest locales
Game Reviews

8th September video games roundup: Scrutinising the Saudi takeover of Evo, and Ghost of Yotei has the nicest locales

by admin September 8, 2025


The Saudi takeover of Evo gives fighting game fans an uncomfortable choice

Image credit: Eurogamer / Evo / Qiddiya City

“Last week, RTS, co-owner of Evo, the biggest fighting game tournament in the world, announced it had been acquired by the Saudi Arabian city of Qiddiya. While far from the sole event of note across the genre, Evo remains a symbol of sorts for the fighting game community. Of all the tournaments, it is Evo that is held in the highest regard. Now, that community must choose between its long-lasting values and the bag.”


So writes Connor in his sterling op-ed on the Saudi Arabian takeover of Evo, that was announced last week. Now the scene, historically one based on an “all challengers welcome” philosophy, is faced with a near-impossible choice – but one players and fans must make nonetheless.

Opinion:
The Saudi Arabian takeover of fighting games’ biggest tournament means players – and the wider community – have a choice to make: between its culture and a payout



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September 8, 2025 0 comments
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The Saudi Arabian takeover of fighting games' biggest tournament means players - and the wider community - have a choice to make: between its culture and a payout
Game Updates

The Saudi Arabian takeover of fighting games’ biggest tournament means players – and the wider community – have a choice to make: between its culture and a payout

by admin September 8, 2025


Last week, RTS, co-owner of Evo, the biggest fighting game tournament in the world, announced it had been acquired by the Saudi Arabian city of Qiddiya. While far from the sole event of note across the genre, Evo remains a symbol of sorts for the fighting game community. Of all the tournaments, it is Evo that is held in the highest regard. Now, that community must choose between its long-lasting values and the bag.

That bag, one doubtless filled with financial support fighting game’s best players and organisers dearly desire (if not in some cases, outright need), comes with a price of its own. The Saudi Arabian government has in recent years been engaging in a mass sportswashing campaign across the gaming industry, buying up developers and events in order to paint a shining picture of the country. A country that, under this current government, has a history of human rights abuses, is ranked fourth globally on the slavery index, which assassinated the journalist and critic of the Saudi government, Jamal Khashoggi, in 2018, and which still employs state executions as punishment for non-violent criminal acts – those executions surging in 2025.

If the new RTS owners are flanking the tournament from its right, its left is no bastion from government influence either. Sony had until late last month been a co-owner of Evo while also being a major partner of the Saudi Arabian Esports World Cup. Its share was acquired by Nodwin gaming, a notable Indian esports business that, for once, actually has decades of event experience behind it, rather than the usual efforts from newcomers to milk money out of passionate young gaming enthusiasts. Sadly, as of July this year, it’s now also working extensively with the Saudi Arabian government for the country’s Esports World Cup media rights in India.

Here’s a video breaking down the numbers of Evo 2025.Watch on YouTube

How did we get here? The Saudi Arabian venture into the video game industry has gone largely uncontested, save for a few professional players and the Geoguessr community, of all things. The Saudi Arabian government could not have picked a better time to start paying for relatively cheap PR. Esports organisations, having failed to create a source of sustainable income, scared off investors a few years back. This, to put it succinctly, means that the majority of the competitive gaming space right now is hungry for cash, save for a few particular scenes.

If the wider esports space is skint, then the fighting game scene is especially so. For years, the community has kept the arcade spirit alive, maintaining a norm of open-bracket tournaments that allow any aspiring player to sign up and try their luck against the best in the world. This has proven a good thing for steady growth and cultural development; going to a fighting game event is as much a social endeavor for the vast majority of attendees as it is a competitive venture.

The negative consequence of this however is that the competitive fighting game scene remains an especially difficult landscape for pro players to make a decent living. This trade has forced some of the best players in the world to focus on content creation for some financial stability. Bryant “Smug” Huggins for example, a beloved and highly talented player, has focused much of his efforts on YouTube and Twitch, and who can blame him? Sponsoring fighting game players has proven relatively unappealing due to the open bracket format. With the unpredictability an open bracket brings, as a sponsor there is no guarantee that your player will show up on a livestream, let alone on the finals stage. What’s the point in paying a player $10,000 if no one sees your company logo?

Events like Frosty Faustings are great for the typical attendee, but can be brutal for getting a logo on camera. | Image credit: Victoria Hionis / Frosty Faustings

Tournament prize pools help a little but not much for the vast majority of professional players. A Street Fighter 6 player winning the Capcom Cup would win a fantastic $1m – but you can only have one winner. Coming 5th lands you $10,000, nary enough to sustain oneself for a year. Winning Evo 2025, the biggest event in the world, earned Dominican superstar MenaRD $16,932. Hardly superstar money. As a result the majority of players are content creators or live streamers – with the exception of a select few non-competitor figures like Stephen “Sajam” Lyon or Maximilian Miles Christiansen (AKA Maximilian Dood), the players are the influencers.

It is therefore disappointing, but not at all surprising, that when Saudi Arabia burst onto the scene with a bag full of cash, there was little by way of true pushback. Games publishers like Bandai Namco and Capcom appear entirely unbothered by any moral concerns; Saudi Arabia’s investment essentially amounts to a bucketload of free marketing for their games. Likewise, competitive players largely leapt to grab it with both hands. When the Esports World Cup showed up with “life changing money” – the first, held in Riyadh last year, had a total prize pool of more than $60m – those who have dedicated their lives to the genre weren’t exactly in a great position to turn it down.

This brings us to the real point here: that as a result of all this, the everyday people involved in the fighting game scene have been put in a lose-lose position. Take Victor “Punk” Woodley, who is the Evo 2024 Street Fighter champion and a fantastic player – he also dropped out of school to pursue a career as a pro long before any real Saudi involvement in the scene.

Or take Alex Jebailey. Everyone loves Jebailey. The owner and founder of fighting game event CEO, he’s been a tournament organiser since 2010, running both CEO and CEOtaku. Hosting fighting game events is expensive, stressful, and not very profitable. Doubly so these days, with ongoing economic upheaval in the USA that has hurt both wallets and the desire to travel.

This isn’t to single those individuals out – far from it. Instead the question is whether it’s really any surprise that Jebailey, with a company to keep afloat and a family to provide for, has been working on the Esports World Cup as a senior product manager for fighting games? Or that Woodley, having committed everything to fighting games as a career, hasn’t given it up in an instant? The situation with the fighting game community, and indeed much of wider esports, is a world away from that of, say, professional footballers, golfers, or belt-holding boxers – many of whom are multimillionaires already – who have happily made the same decision.

The Saudi Arabian government has proven that money is no barrier to promoting their ventures, even cross-promoting fighting games its invested in. | Image credit: Riyadh

At the same time however, with notable fighting game players readily engaging directly with the Esports World Cup, ground was already ceded for the expansion of Saudi government influence. Likewise criticisms towards those who have taken a stance were numerous, and largely ignorant (or worse). Some would point to the USA’s sins, suggesting that taking a stand against Saudi’s government-funded Esports World Cup was hypocritical if those same people also competed in American events. But Evo and other American events had no government involvement – they were ultimately community events. Many participating in the EWC would argue that engaging directly is the only way to influence change, though a recent Amazon documentary on the EWC blurred out rainbow flags on players’ uniforms. And all the while executions in the country have only increased since the EWC’s emergence – so much for the hopes for a positive impact on human rights.

People might also state it’s good for the region, and would at least develop the competitive gaming community there. Except the EWC is an invitational, focused almost entirely on bringing foreign players in, rather than promoting local talent from the region. To those against the EWC as part of wider support for LGBT folks, they’d state it was perfectly safe for all attendees despite their gender or sexual identity – which may very well be true, but it certainly wouldn’t be true for those an hour down the road. All these justifications fade away with even the slightest of interrogation, and in most cases quickly expose themselves as excuses to make a quick buck without having to stop and question it.

This glitz and glamour is so extravagant and widespread for a reason. | Image credit: Esports World Cup.

This week it was made clear, to even those who were happy not thinking too hard about the wave of sportswashing, that the Saudi Arabian government had no intention of stopping its spending spree. It wants it all. I’m certain there are wonderful people working at Evo, with their heart in the right place and a desire to serve the community just as they have for years. I’m sure Evo Vegas next year will be great fun – we may even see a substantial increase in the prize pools. But the event now is – regardless of their intent – a component in the sportswashing venture. It’s a bummer, but that’s the reality.

There’s no regulatory body to stop this, and no bigger fish (or frankly given the state of esports’ profitability, greater fool) to buy the tournament from its new owners. And so this is unlikely to go away, at least unless the Saudi Arabian government decides competitive gaming isn’t worth the squeeze, or that only a mere handful of fighting game fans will ever actually travel to Qiddiya without getting paid to do so.

The consequences are unavoidable: any diehard fighting game fans, competitive players, and all the wider community members from devs and publishers to event organisers on the ground, find themselves with a decision to make. Stay true to the long-held ideals of the FCG – that any and all are welcome – or take the money with full knowingness of where it’s come from, and what that money truly means. At the very least, it’s time for those who have expressed their displeasure to actually turn those words into action, to support grassroots events – once again – and to carve a line in the sand, though that as always is far from easy. For those who haven’t, it’s now absolutely clear: the time where it was once possible to turn a blind eye to sportswashing in fighting games is absolutely over.



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September 8, 2025 0 comments
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Fighting game players in uproar after Evo's new Saudi government owners, calls to support grassroots events
Game Updates

Fighting game players in uproar after Evo’s new Saudi government owners, calls to support grassroots events

by admin September 3, 2025


Fighting game players are up in arms following news that RTS – a gaming talent agency and owner of the Evo tournament series – has been acquired by the Saudi Arabian mega city project Qiddiya.

This news came yesterday afternoon via an official statement by CSO at Qiddiya Muhannad Aldawood, who wrote on Linkedin: “Excited to share that Qiddiya has acquired full ownership of RTS, a strategic step that will further strengthen our esports business and unlock new opportunities across the broader gaming ecosystem. And most importantly, this will enable Qiddiya to keep fueling the continued growth of Evolution Championship Series (EVO), the world’s largest fighting game event since 1996, with unlimited [potential].”

The response online from fighting game community members was largely one of disappointment, as various fans of the genre came out to express sadness at the new owners and emphasised the importance of supporting grassroots community-run events. Saudi Arabia has been criticised by Human Rights organisations for its prolific use of slavery, the death penalty, and more.

Here’s the recent Sagat trailer for Street Fighter 6Watch on YouTube

Professional Street Fighter 6 player ChrisCCH, who previously refused a place at the Saudi-owned Esports World Cup, wrote on X: “Not terribly surprising, but still unfortunate news. Sad for the LGBTQ+ members of the community, and also worried about the scene becoming increasingly funded by money that will disappear as soon as the funders get bored.”

Sajam, a popular commentator and content creator within the fighting game space, stated: “I think the news personally just makes me want to think about more ways to create cool stuff for the rest of our community. It feels like the pieces that belong to fighting game fans are shrinking all the time.”

With a general distaste around Evo following the news, some have looked to other American alternative events to attend, including CEO. One user on X Roycebracket summed up their thoughts with: “CEO is about to become the real evo” while LandedIt took a more humorous approach, writing: “Glory to Alex Jebailey ceo 2026 4 jebaillion entrants”.

In response to the news, Evo general manager Rick Thiher posted his own statement: “Everything I have worked on in fighting games has been with the ambition of bringing our communities together. Inclusivity, community, and connectivity matter to me. It’s deeply personal that they remain part of what I work on and that the future of Evo respects that.”

Whether or not this uproar on social media actually manifests into a material impact on the future of Evo remains a question mark: there’s a big difference between expressing displeasure on Twitter and taking actual action.



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September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Zangief blows off steam.
Game Reviews

Saudi Arabia Now Co-Owns Biggest Street Fighter Tournament Of The Year

by admin September 3, 2025


Sony recently ended one of its more bizarre pandemic-era side-quests by selling its majority stake in the fighting game event Evo. One of the biggest esports events of the year is now co-owned by talent management company RTS and India-based NODWIN Gaming. That seemed mostly fine, until now.

Yesterday Qiddiya Gaming, which is backed by the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund (PIF). announced it was taking full ownership of RTS, making it the second-biggest stakeholder for Evo. Chief strategy officer Muhannad Aldawood called it “a strategic step that will further strengthen our esports business and unlock new opportunities across the broader gaming ecosystem.”

He added, “most importantly, this will enable Qiddiya to keep fueling the continued growth of Evolution Championship Series (EVO), the world’s largest fighting game event since 1996, with unlimited potentials.”

The move puts the premier event for Street Fighter 6, Tekken 8, and other fighting games squarely in the crosshairs of Saudi Arabia’s ongoing efforts to “sportswash” its abysmal human rights reputation and the fact that it’s still ruled by a literal monarch in the year 2025. Other notable attempts include things like merging with the PGA Tour, partnering with WWE, and paying Christiano Ronaldo $700 million to play soccer in Riyadh.

There have also been big shifts into gaming as well. This has included investing billions across everything from Nintendo and Capcom to Electronic Arts and Nexon Gaming. Earlier this year, it bought Pokémon Go and other Niantic-developed mobile games for a whopping $3.5 billion. It even bought all of King of Fighters and Metal Slug publisher SNK Corporation, taking the company private and seemingly forcing the developers to put Ronaldo in this year’s Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves.

But the push has been even more apparent in competitive gaming. It purchased major global tournament organizer ESL FACEIT in 2022, and snagged a 30 percent stake in Chinese esports company Hero Esports in 2023. And it just wrapped up the 2025 Esports World Cup, an attempt to astroturf a new major competitive gaming event into existence through massive prize pools never before seen, even in the esports bubble years of the late 2010s.

While some communities have boycotted the event, others have been happy to lean on the publicity and money at a time when pro gaming is struggling. A documentary promoting the 2025 EWC was released on Amazon earlier this year, but the version streaming in Saudi Arabia stripped out players talking about LGTBQ+ issues and concerns.

“We are disappointed to learn, upon your request for comment, that the Saudi broadcast of Esports World Cup: Level Up has been altered to remove images of our Pride jersey, as well as important parts of our Co-CEO Steve Arhancet’s story as a gay man in esports,” Team Liquid, which fields players in League of Legends, Overwatch 2, Apex Legends, and more, wrote at the time.

Saudi Arabia’s investment fund is still only a minority investor in Evo, and it’s unclear how the change in ownership will impact the event moving forward. At the very least, it’s hard to see Saudi Arabia not being added to the list of countries that currently host annual Evo tournaments. How pro players respond also remains to be seen.

Fighting games have always been unique within esports. With a legacy that dates back to the early arcade days and communities built on local, grassroots connections rather than corporate branding exercises, Evo has always had a special place within competitive gaming. It’s now one that will have to confront the moral calculus of co-owners currently accused, among other things, of a recent surge in extra-judicial executions.



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September 3, 2025 0 comments
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An illustration of a brain shown to look like a computer chip.
Product Reviews

Saudi AI Firm Launches Halal Chatbot

by admin August 26, 2025


Companies with AI chatbots love to highlight their capability as translators, but they still default to English, both in function and in the information they are trained on. With that in mind, Humain, an AI company in Saudi Arabia, has now launched an Arabic-native chatbot.

The bot, called Humain Chat, runs on the Allam large language model, according to Bloomberg, which the company claims was trained on “one of the largest Arabic datasets ever assembled” and is the “world’s most advanced Arabic-first AI model.” The company says that it is not only fluent in the Arabic language, but also in “Islamic culture, values and heritage.” (If you have religious concerns about using Humain Chat, consult your local Imam.) The chatbot, which will be made available as an app, will first be available only in Saudi Arabia and currently supports bilingual conversations in Arabic and English, supporting dialects including Egyptian and Lebanese. The plan is for the app to roll out across the Middle East and eventually go global, with the goal of serving the nearly 500 million Arabic-speaking people across the world.

Humain took on Allam and the chatbot project after it was started by the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority, a government agency and tech regulator. For that reason, Bloomberg raises the possibility that Humain Chat may comply with censorship requests of the Saudi government and restrict the kind of information made available to users.

Which, yes, that seems unquestionably true. Saudi Arabia’s government regularly attempts to restrict the type of content made available to its populace. The country scored a 25 out of 100 on Freedom House’s 2024 “Freedom of the Net” report, attributed to its strict controls over online activity and restrictive speech laws that saw a women’s rights advocate jailed for more than a decade.

But we also should probably start explicitly framing American AI tools this way, too. Within its support documents, OpenAI explicitly states that ChatGPT is “skewed towards Western views.” Hell, you can watch Elon Musk try to fine-tune the ideology of xAI’s Grok in real time as he responds to Twitter users who think the chatbot is too woke—an effort that, at one point, led to Grok referring to itself as “MechaHitler.”

There’s certainly a difference between corporate and government control (though, increasingly, it’s worth asking if there actually is that big of a difference), but earlier this year, the Trump administration set out plans to regulate the kinds of things large language models are allowed to output if the companies that make them want federal contracts. That includes requirements to “reject radical climate dogma” and be free from “ideological biases” like “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” It’s not force, but it is coercion—and given that OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google have all given their chatbots to the government for basically nothing, it seems like they are more than happy to be coerced.



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August 26, 2025 0 comments
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