EA AI Uh-Oh: EA and Stability AI Are Teaming Up

EA AI Uh-Oh: EA and Stability AI Are Teaming Up

Major games publisher EA has announced a partnership with Stability AI, the developer of the Stable Diffusion generative AI software. This comes after the announcement of a buyout from Silver Lake, Affinity Partners and the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund that will leave the publisher in $20 billion of debt come Q1 2027.

Electronic Arts is one of the best-known companies in video games, with over 40 years of history and numerous major franchises in their portfolio. Their sports series like Madden and EAFC continue to top the best-selling charts annually and Split Fiction is one of this year’s most acclaimed new games.

Despite their high sales and high user counts, investors have not been satisfied; the company’s income was down by $79 million as of the Q1 2025 report, which has led to this leveraged buyout that will leave them bearing the brunt of $20 billion of debt in the near future. As such, cost-cutting measures like this AI partnership don’t come as a surprise.

In the press release put out by Stability AI, they outline their plan to “co-develop transformative generative AI models, tools, and workflows […] to reimagine how games are made.” This is far from the first time a game publisher has partnered with AI—just this week, Korean publisher Krafton pivoted to an “AI-first” approach—which will all only be to the detriment of their output in the coming years.

Publicly released in 2022 and ruining Google Image searches ever since, Stable Diffusion is a text-to-image model like DALL-E that allows users to generate images based on text prompts, drawing upon every image on the internet it has been trained on to regurgitate them as “new” images.

The technology has proven controversial due to its flagrant violation of copyright and artistic integrity, with several lawsuits against it over the years. Although this is the flagship technology of Stability AI, the company also offers licenses for video, audio and 3D models. It is likely that each of these models will be forcibly integrated into developer workspaces following this partnership. With James Cameron on Stability’s board of directors (despite keeping AI out of his films), this partnership represents just one creative industry the company is trying to work in. The games industry, like so many others, remains intent on forcing AI on both their workers and their consumers—even when AI gives you games like, well, whatever this is supposed to be:

Oh my god some fucking tech dingdong posted this on Twitter with the caption “AI games are going to be amazing” totally seriously, you have to watch it. You have to. In full screen.

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— K. Thor Jensen (@kthorjensen.bsky.social) October 24, 2025 at 11:02 AM

 
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