A take-private deal this size needs a way to pay for itself. EA may have just shown its hand. The game maker is opening up its players to advertisers.
Ads That Live Inside The Game
EA launched a new business on Monday called EA Advertising. It lets brands drop right into the action. Think ad boards, scoreboards, and broadcast overlays. It is the same signage you would see at a real stadium, now inside the game.
It goes past billboards too. Brands can build in-game challenges and rewards. They can even drop in custom items and vanity gear. That turns the ad into something players touch. It is not something they just sit through.
EA calls it a way to grow its ecosystem. The reach is the selling point. EA says it now hits more than 120 million players a month. By its own count, players run through 23,000 NFL seasons every day in Madden. They also finish more than a billion matches a month in EA Sports FC. That scale is what EA is selling to brands.
"We're helping brands become part of those moments," said David Tinson, EA's chief experience officer. He says the ads are built for players, not bolted on.
We follow how the biggest companies turn attention into money every weekday in Market Briefs - plus a free investing masterclass the day you join.
The $55 Billion Deal Behind The Timing
Last year, EA agreed to go private in an all-cash deal worth $55 billion. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund led it, with Silver Lake and Affinity Partners. It ranks as the largest deal of its kind ever. EA stays based in Redwood City. Andrew Wilson keeps the CEO seat. Now the new owners need the business to pay its way.
A buyout that big comes with debt. Debt needs steady cash to cover it. Turning 120 million players into ad space is about as steady as cash gets.
Streaming firms ran the same move with cheaper, ad-supported plans. They found a fresh way to charge for an audience they already had. EA is now doing the same with games.
To keep advertisers calm, EA says the ads are "privacy-safe" and checked by outside standards. They run through a new in-house ad server.
Worth Noting
EA has dipped a toe here before. It has worked with brands like Visa, Lowe's, Red Bull, Xfinity, and Mountain Dew. What is new is treating ads as their own product line. A fresh EA Sports partner program backs it up. The program offers brands one of the most engaged sports crowds online. It spans live events, in-game spots, creator tools, and social play.
Past tie-ups even ran custom gear and branded events. Players will decide how much in-game advertising they will stomach before it grates. That is the line EA now has to walk.
For more on how companies like this actually make their money, read Market Briefs each morning - you also get a 45-minute course on investing as a bonus.
