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Take-Two's CEO Says AI Can Copy GTA, But It Can't Build The Next One

Published May 20, 2026
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Summary:
  • Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick told David Senra's Founders podcast he is "all in" on AI for game development.
  • Zelnick said AI is great at asset creation but not at hit creation, with one of his lines being that "clones don't sell."
  • Take-Two owns Rockstar Games, the studio behind Grand Theft Auto, and Zelnick confirmed Grand Theft Auto VI is set to launch on November 19, 2026 after roughly 18 months of internal delays.

The man behind the world's most valuable video game franchise just told Silicon Valley to slow down, because AI can build a Grand Theft Auto lookalike but not the next Grand Theft Auto.

Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick made the case on David Senra's Founders podcast, posted Sunday, where he called himself "all in" on AI while also saying the idea that AI threatens big studios misreads what AI actually does.

"Clones Don't Sell"

Zelnick's case boiled down to one line: "AI so far is really great at asset creation, but hit creation isn't asset creation." In plain terms for investors, AI can speed up the factory-work parts of game development - art, environments, repetitive code - which still leaves the part that makes a game stick to a player for 200 hours.

The market fear has been that AI tools make it cheap for anyone to build a Grand Theft Auto rival, while Zelnick's reply was that the bar to make a game has always been low and the bar to make one people care about has always been high. "Anyone can make a video game," he said.

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The GTA VI Backdrop

Context matters here, since Zelnick used the same podcast to confirm Grand Theft Auto VI will launch on November 19, 2026, with the franchise sitting inside Rockstar Games, Take-Two's flagship label. He admitted on the show that the game was roughly 18 months behind its original internal target.

Zelnick is also pushing back on the popular investor worry that AI flattens the moat for big studios, with his view running the other way. His read is that AI cuts cost on the parts that have already been commoditized, which actually widens the gap for studios that own the rare ingredient - the original idea.

He added that AI productivity gains don't automatically mean cheaper or faster blockbuster games, because the savings tend to get plowed back into bigger ambitions.

Worth Noting

The take lines up with how Hollywood is thinking about the same problem, which is that AI helps you make more, not necessarily make a hit. For investors, that's a quiet reassurance for studios with proven franchises, and a warning for any startup pitching that AI alone is its edge.

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