Tabletop.me brings the Middle East’s first tabletop gaming convention to life
Updated 26 October 2025
Shyama Krishna Kumar
DUBAI: When tabletop.me opens its doors in Dubai this November, it will mark the Middle East’s first major tabletop gaming convention, but, along with that, it will also be a celebration of something far older: human connection.
“We’ve been tabletop gaming for 8,000 years as a species,” said organizer Mark Azzam, an airline pilot turned entrepreneur and founder who has made it his mission to connect people through games.
“The oldest board found in Egypt dates back to 4000 or 5000 B.C. And yet, this digital world we’ve built has only existed for about 30 years. I find it sad that we’d lose what we’ve been doing for millennia, being together.”
In an era dominated by virtual entertainment and artificial intelligence, tabletop.me aims to remind people of the joy of gathering around a physical board. “You never see someone frowning at a tabletop session,” Azzam said. “Everyone smiles, everyone laughs, everyone connects.”
The three-day event, to be held from Nov. 7-9 at the Dubai Outlet Mall, is designed for both newcomers and seasoned gamers. For beginners, the biggest hurdle — learning the rules — is removed. “The biggest barrier to entry is the rulebook,” explained Azzam in an interview with Arab News. “You buy a game, take it home, and think, ‘One day I’ll learn this.’ At tabletop.me, our trained game masters are there to guide you, so there’s no barrier. Just come, play, and enjoy.”
He added that this “introductory spirit” is key: “It’s all about opening up something new, especially for families. Here, parents, kids, and grandparents can all share the table.”
While many still associate board games with Monopoly or Risk, modern tabletop games offer more creativity and strategy, said Azzam. “Monopoly is three hours long and always the same. Modern games change every time you play,” he said. “We have a big battle to fight against these old perceptions, but once people try the new generation of games, they never turn back.”
Beyond gaming, tabletop.me features workshops, industry talks and tournaments. But it’s also built for cross-generational fun. “We have the ‘Tiny Tabletop’ area for kids aged 4 to 8, with face painting, bouncy castles, and games that spark imagination,” Azzam said. “We’re even hosting workshops that teach parents how to be dungeon masters for their kids.”
There’s also space for tradition. A “Classic Corner” will celebrate beloved regional games like chess, backgammon, and jackaroo — “a nod to the timeless play that connects generations.”
Above all, Azzam hopes tabletop.me will unite the region’s fragmented gaming community. “Connection and unity — that’s my dream,” he said. “Different leaders, different groups and communities, all coming together under one big banner.”
Madeeha Qureshi’s new cookbook brings Saudi flavors to the world
The former ‘MasterChef UK’ contestant’s recipes pay homage to her childhood in the Kingdom
Updated 12 March 2026
Sumaiyya Naseem
JEDDAH: Born in Pakistan, raised in Saudi Arabia, and now living in the UK, Madeeha Qureshi says she belongs to “a third-culture space.” Her debut publication, “The Red Sea Cookbook,” is her way of coming home to Saudi Arabia.
“Among the vibrancy of Saudi food and picturesque landscape, you will find a little girl’s heartwarming stories and memories,” Qureshi, a food writer, recipe developer and content creator who has more than 300,000 followers on Instagram, tells Arab News. “I cannot separate Saudi Arabia from my core DNA. It is with me wherever I go. It is the place where I was brought up, where my memories were made.”
Born in Pakistan, raised in Saudi Arabia, and now living in the UK, Madeeha Qureshi says she belongs to “a third-culture space.” (Supplied)
British food writer Tom Parker Bowles hailed “The Red Sea Cookbook” as “a joyous introduction to the wonders of Saudi Arabian cookery.” It is part memoir, part culinary atlas, and, Qureshi says, “an applaudable ending to the person who wrote my beginning” — her late father.
Qureshi arrived in the Kingdom as a baby in the early 1980s, when her father worked on Royal Commission projects in Yanbu and Jubail. Her earliest memories are of living in a community of expatriate families from around the world.
“We talk about diversity in the West, but Saudi Arabia, at its core, is as diverse as anywhere,” she says. “I was surrounded by people from all walks of life, from every corner of the world.”
This is the Saudi Arabia that rarely reaches Western audiences: a civilization influenced by centuries of trade routes and pilgrimage.
Qureshi as a child with her father at the Red Sea coast in Saudi Arabia. (Instagram)
In “The Red Sea Cookbook,” Qureshi writes of a land where the scent of cardamom and dried limes drifts through historic markets, where fishermen along the Red Sea coast haul in grouper and emperor fish at dawn, and where family meals stretch into long evenings filled with coffee and conversation. And Saudi cuisine, she argues, has long been misunderstood and pigeonholed into a vague notion of “Arab food.”
“There is a general misconception in the West that it’s bland, beige, boring. But it is the polar opposite,” she notes.
The book’s origins are inseparable from personal loss. When her father — whom she refers to as her “safe space” and the “core of my whole existence”— died, she found herself unable to process the grief.
“So much happened in such a short time,” she recalls. “I had a rainbow baby, then another baby. Then the (COVID-19) pandemic happened and I lost my job.”
The cover of Madeeha Qureshi's 'The Red Sea Cookbook.' (Supplied)
The latter shock did mean, however, that she was able to join “MasterChef UK” as a contestant in 2021.
In the quarterfinals of the famed culinary show, contestants were asked to create a dish that carried deep personal meaning. The challenge transported Qureshi back to the beaches of Yanbu and a childhood snack her father would bring home for her.
“The thing that popped into my head was mutabbaq — which I associated with my dad from a very young age,” she says. “I decided to give them a taste of something which has never been showcased to the British media.”
When she presented the dish — a stuffed, shallow-fried pastry common across the Kingdom and the Gulf — to the judges and began explaining the memory behind it, something gave way.
“All of a sudden, this whole tsunami of tears that was sitting inside me came out. The cameras captured it and when it went on air, the whole country cried with me; they grieved with me.”
She realized that personal food stories resonate across cultures and that Saudi cuisine had never really been presented on a Western platform. And so, the idea for her memoir-style cookbook was born.
Qureshi spent three years working on it and weathered hundreds of rejections before Nourish, an imprint of Watkins Media, took the leap.
“Writing this book made me reflect on the significance of my upbringing in Saudi Arabia and the way it has shaped my life and seasoned my palate,” Qureshi says.
“The Red Sea Cookbook” was born from the years she spent adapting Saudi dishes with British pantry staples. She found ways to liberate Saudi recipes from the assumption that authentic cooking requires specialist ingredients or elaborate techniques. Her mutabbaq, for example, uses spring roll pastry instead of hand-stretched dough.
“I actually showcased the idea on ‘MasterChef,’” she explains. “(Because the pastry is ready-made) you can make it within half an hour.” It’s a convenient dish for students and busy professionals living abroad and craving a taste of home. The small change also makes Saudi cooking approachable without losing its soul.
“The ingredients are not difficult to source,” she adds. “And you can still have the best of your memories, those foods from Saudi Arabia that you remember, without compromising the key flavors.”
When Qureshi visited Saudi Arabia in April last year, she retraced her childhood, made a pilgrimage to Madinah, and enjoyed exploring Riyadh. She found some places unchanged and others unrecognizable. The country felt transformed and eager to showcase its culture to the world. “The Red Sea Cookbook” is well-suited to this moment.
“This is actually a book showing Saudi culture moving forward rather than still chained to its past,” she says. “It’s like how the country is unfolding and showing its colors to the world, which people need to see.”
Those colors include the extraordinary and deceptively simple seafood of the Red Sea coast as well as beloved national favorites such as kabsa, mandi and saleeq, and traditional sweet treats such as sh’ariya and areeka malakiya.
“Food has the incredible power to transport you somewhere without physically being there,” she writes in the book. “During these unpredictable times, this is the best we can do.”