Gaming business a base economy for Saudi Arabia with huge return: NEOM CEO

NEOM CEO Nadhmi Al-Nasr spoke at the Next World Forum in Riyadh on Sept.7. (Supplied)
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Updated 07 September 2022
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Gaming business a base economy for Saudi Arabia with huge return: NEOM CEO

RIYADH: The gaming business is a base economy in Saudi Arabia with huge potential for return, as the Kingdom steadily diversifies its revenue-generating sources in line with its Vision 2030, said NEOM CEO Nadhmi Al-Nasr.

“We see the gaming business as a base economy to start off. Everything has a return. That economy will have to be built on solid sectors that have a future," Al-Nasr said while speaking at the Next World Forum in Riyadh on Sept.7. 

He revealed that the heart of NEOM’s gaming interests will be housed in The Line, the proposed smart linear city in NEOM which is designed to have no cars, streets, or carbon emissions.

“In the middle of ‘The Line.’ That is where the heart of gaming will be. When you are walking in ‘The Line’, you will hear the noise of gaming,” he added.

Al-Nasr said that Saudis have all the resources not just to play games but to develop and design games too.

“In NEOM itself, over 40 percent of the employees, mostly Saudis, are all in their late 20s and early 30s. You have the right generation to design games, not only to play the games,” he said.

Al-Nasr further pointed out that NEOM has already started a program to create joint venture partnerships with major international firms to elevate the gaming sector.

He added that NEOM has partnered regionally with Saudi Arabian media conglomerate MBC to establish the first AAA games development studio.

AAA is a classification within the gaming industry that labels games produced and distributed by midsized or big publishers that usually have higher budgets.

“Gamers are those who are daring to risk and grow. Gamers will be game changers in the world. Not just in gaming, but in many aspects of life. They will be leading the world into a different world,” he further noted.

Wayne Borg, managing director, Media, Entertainment, Culture & Fashion Industries at NEOM agreed, saying that gaming is one of the future industries which will fuel the Saudi Arabian economy.

“We are all here. We understand how big the gaming sector is globally and how the Kingdom, in particular, punches above its weight in terms of market size,” said Borg. 

He added: “In NEOM, it is about the future and how people are going to live, how they’re going to work, how they’re going to interact socially with their environment, and I think that’s absolutely epitomized by The Line.”


Saudi Arabia accounts for 25% of Pakistan’s global financial remittances, says ambassador 

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Saudi Arabia accounts for 25% of Pakistan’s global financial remittances, says ambassador 

RIYADH: Remittances from Pakistani workers in Saudi Arabia reached around $9 billion last year, representing 25 percent of the total global financial remittances received by the country, according to Islamabad’s Ambassador to Riyadh. 

Ahmed Farooq told Al-Eqtisadiah that remittances are witnessing continuous growth and constitute an important part of Pakistan’s economic stability. 

Pakistan has signed 27 memoranda of understanding worth close to $2.8 billion, covering diverse sectors from agriculture to manpower export, through technology and food products, according to Farooq.  

Among these MoUs, 17 worth $1 billion have been activated, with numerous opportunities available for Saudi investors in Pakistan in the mining, information technology, agriculture, and petrochemicals sectors. 

According to Farooq, Pakistan imports around $4 billion worth of goods from Saudi Arabia, with its main imports being oil and its derivatives.  

He added: “When we look at the volume of trade exchange between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, we find that Pakistan’s exports are about $700 million, including rice, meat, and textiles, and these are the main products.” 

There are currently 100 Pakistani technology companies operating in Saudi Arabia, offering diverse services and products to the Saudi market, the Ambassador mentioned, confirming that work is ongoing to enhance cooperation in the information technology sector. 

He affirmed that over the past two years, several Saudi trade delegations have visited Pakistan, and their visits resulted in the signing of a number of MoUs and agreements. We have been able to convert approximately $1 billion worth of these MoUs into agreements, he explained. 

He clarified that the leadership’s focus is currently on enhancing the economic partnership between the two countries, which includes trade, investment, and technology. 

Pakistani workers in Saudi Arabia, who send their earnings to Pakistan, are considered a fundamental pillar of this partnership.