By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
Accept
Absolute Geeks UAEAbsolute Geeks UAE
  • STORIES
    • TECH
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • GUIDES
    • OPINIONS
  • REVIEWS
    • READERS’ CHOICE
    • ALL REVIEWS
    • ━
    • SMARTPHONES
    • CARS
    • HEADPHONES
    • ACCESSORIES
    • LAPTOPS
    • TABLETS
    • WEARABLES
    • SPEAKERS
    • APPS
  • WATCHLIST
    • TV & MOVIES REVIEWS
    • SPOTLIGHT
  • GAMING
    • GAMING NEWS
    • GAME REVIEWS
  • +
    • TMT LABS
    • WHO WE ARE
    • GET IN TOUCH
Reading: Report: EA could go private in historic $50bn deal with Saudi Arabia’s PIF and partners
Share
Notification Show More
Absolute Geeks UAEAbsolute Geeks UAE
  • STORIES
    • TECH
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • GUIDES
    • OPINIONS
  • REVIEWS
    • READERS’ CHOICE
    • ALL REVIEWS
    • ━
    • SMARTPHONES
    • CARS
    • HEADPHONES
    • ACCESSORIES
    • LAPTOPS
    • TABLETS
    • WEARABLES
    • SPEAKERS
    • APPS
  • WATCHLIST
    • TV & MOVIES REVIEWS
    • SPOTLIGHT
  • GAMING
    • GAMING NEWS
    • GAME REVIEWS
  • +
    • TMT LABS
    • WHO WE ARE
    • GET IN TOUCH
Follow US

Report: EA could go private in historic $50bn deal with Saudi Arabia’s PIF and partners

GEEK DESK
GEEK DESK
Sep 27

Electronic Arts may be heading into one of the biggest shakeups in gaming history. Reports suggest the publisher is in advanced talks on a roughly $50 billion deal to go private, backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), private equity firm Silver Lake, and Affinity Partners.

The potential buyout would be structured as a leveraged deal, with debt financing reportedly arranged by JPMorgan. If it closes, it would rank among the largest transactions ever in tech and gaming. EA’s stock jumped on the news, reflecting investor belief that an announcement could land soon, though no agreement has been finalized.

For PIF, the move would align with its growing footprint in gaming through Savvy Games Group, part of Saudi Arabia’s broader Vision 2030 plan to diversify beyond oil. Savvy has already poured billions into publisher stakes, esports infrastructure, and global gaming events. Owning a giant like EA would cement Saudi influence over one of the world’s most valuable gaming ecosystems.

EA itself is an attractive target for private buyers. Its sports franchises—EA Sports FC, Madden NFL, and FIFA predecessors—deliver predictable annual revenues through live-service modes, packs, and subscriptions. Add in Apex Legends, The Sims, and Battlefield, and you get a catalogue with both global reach and steady cash flow. That consistency makes EA particularly appealing at a time when the broader games industry faces uneven launches and shifting consumer habits.

For players, any immediate changes to franchises like EA Sports FC 26 or Madden are unlikely. Live services and existing pipelines will continue, with adjustments—pricing, event strategy, or content cadence—likely happening gradually if new ownership seeks to retool EA away from quarterly earnings pressure.

If completed, the $50bn buyout wouldn’t just be a financial milestone—it would reshape the balance of power in global gaming, placing one of the largest publishers under a consortium heavily influenced by Saudi Arabia’s investment strategy.

Share
What do you think?
Happy0
Sad0
Love0
Surprise0
Cry0
Angry0
Dead0

WHAT'S HOT ❰

Highguard review in progress: an FPS that starts strong thanks to smart design and snappy combat
Apple introduces AirTag 2 with longer range and louder alerts
Samsung unveils Galaxy Z Flip7 Olympic Edition for Milano Cortina 2026
Apple updates iPhone 5s software more than a decade after launch
Claude now works directly inside Slack, Figma, and Canva
Absolute Geeks UAEAbsolute Geeks UAE
Follow US
© 2014 - 2026 Absolute Geeks, a TMT Labs L.L.C-FZ media network
Upgrade Your Brain Firmware
Receive updates, patches, and jokes you’ll pretend you understood.

No spam, just RAM for your brain.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?