Electronic Arts (EA), the publisher behind iconic titles such as Madden NFL, Battlefield, and The Sims, is set to be acquired in a $52.5 billion deal, making it the largest private equity buyout in history. The agreement involves Silver Lake Partners, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), and Affinity Partners, a firm run by Jared Kushner, son-in-law of President Donald Trump. Including EA’s debt, the deal is valued at $55 billion.
Deal Structure and Participants
Under the agreement, EA stockholders will receive $210 per share. PIF, which already holds a 9.9% stake in EA, will roll over its investment as part of the acquisition. Kushner’s Affinity Partners joins Silver Lake and PIF in a move that underscores Saudi Arabia’s aggressive push into the gaming sector. EA will be taken private but continue to operate from its headquarters in Redwood City, California, with CEO Andrew Wilson remaining in his role.
Saudi Arabia’s Expanding Gaming Ambitions
The deal aligns with PIF’s broader strategy to build its gaming arm, Savvy Gaming Group, into a global powerhouse. Since 2022, PIF has taken stakes in several major publishers and acquired companies such as ESL, FACEIT, and Scopely. Analysts say the EA acquisition is its most significant step yet, marking a new phase of investment dominance in the entertainment sector. PIF also holds minority shares in Nintendo.
Market Context and Concerns
By going private, EA will be able to restructure away from public market scrutiny. Despite strong franchises, its annual revenues have stagnated between $7.4 billion and $7.6 billion in recent years. Benchmark analyst Mike Hickey argued that the $210 per share price undervalues EA, citing growth potential from upcoming releases like Battlefield 6 and projections of $2 billion in additional bookings by fiscal 2028. Critics have framed the deal as prioritizing short-term certainty over maximizing long-term shareholder value.
Industry Impact
The acquisition places EA alongside other major buyouts in the gaming sector, following Microsoft’s $69 billion takeover of Activision Blizzard in 2023. Competition from rivals such as Epic Games has heightened investor interest in gaming companies with strong intellectual property and loyal fanbases. EA’s buyout not only reshapes its corporate trajectory but also signals how private equity and sovereign wealth funds are increasingly shaping the future of the global gaming industry.
If approved by shareholders, the transaction is expected to close in early fiscal 2027. The move would mark the end of EA’s 36-year run as a publicly traded company, while ushering in a new era of private ownership and intensified global competition in the video gaming market.