The Games Done Quick vs. SNK drama explained

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Games Done Quick (GDQ) found themselves in the hot seat after pulling the plug on a sponsored stream with gaming company SNK. The internet, as it always does, immediately split into factions, sparking a massive debate over ethics, charity funding, and where we draw the line with corporate ownership.

Here is exactly what went down and why everyone is talking about it.

The Announcement That Started It All

GDQ dropped a multi-tweet statement announcing they canceled their partnership with SNK. They admitted they failed to do their homework on who actually owns the company. Turns out, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund holds a massive 96% majority stake in SNK.

Because of the Saudi government’s track record on human rights, GDQ decided that taking their cash conflicted with their core values of inclusivity. They apologized to the speedrunners and hosts whose schedules were disrupted by the sudden cancellation, and promised to vet their future partners far more rigorously.

The “Look at the Big Picture” Argument

As soon as the tweets went live, a wave of gamers fired back. The main argument? GDQ is a charity event, and turning away money that could literally save lives just to make a political point seems counterproductive. Critics accused the organization of virtue signaling and trying way too hard to be politically correct.

Others pointed out the reality of the modern gaming industry. The Saudi wealth fund has been buying up pieces of the gaming world for years. They own stakes in Capcom, EA, Take-Two, and even hold a roughly 10% stake in Nintendo.

The argument from this camp was simple: if you boycott every company with Saudi backing, you are going to run out of video games to play pretty fast.

The Nuance in the Percentages

Naturally, the internet had a counterargument ready for the “but they own Nintendo too” crowd. Respondents quickly pointed out that there is a massive difference between a passive 10% investment in a large corporation and 96% ownership.

When a government fund owns nearly the entire company, it essentially is the company. For GDQ and its community, taking a direct sponsorship from SNK felt a little too close to accepting money straight from the Saudi regime, crossing a line that a minor stock investment in Nintendo just doesn’t cross.

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