After The Saudi-backed Ea Buyout, Og Sims Director Says Diversity...

After The Saudi-backed Ea Buyout, Og Sims Director Says Diversity...

The future of EA has looked, well, uncertain since it got picked up in the biggest leveraged buyout in private equity history. For one thing, it's now on the hook for $20 billion in debt. For another, the buyout came from a group of investors that included Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Affinity Partners—founded by Donald Trump's son in law Jared Kushner.

LGBT people and women more generally face repression in Saudi Arabia, while Kushner, of course, has strong ties to a Trump administration which has made attacking LGBT rights a cornerstone of its platform.

The presence of such conservative elements in the EA buyout has had more than a few Sims fans worried that the state's involvement in EA might lead to a clampdown on the series' more diverse elements. That'd be a terrible idea for a lot of obvious, moral reasons, but one OG Sims designer (via FRVR) says it would be "existential for the business."

Charles London, who worked as art director on The Sims 1 and creative director on The Sims 2, said that representing same-sex relationships in the earlier games was "everything" for the series. "I think it's existential for the business, right? It is certainly for society. I think it's incredibly important for there to be a mainstream, beloved brand that says, 'love is love and people are people.'"

But it's also that spirit of embracing all humanity that allows The Sims "to be universally appealing", says London, whether the audience be "Young, old, male, female, gay, straight, other, right? American, Iranian, whatever."

Representing as much of humanity as possible is what lets The Sims create an "empathetic and emotional connection to that game" among players, says London. "It's not that there’s so many pants you can dress them in". Though to be fair, London does acknowledge the sheer volume of pants options is also an important part of the appeal.

London reckons that a world in which EA chucked LGBT players under the bus is a world in which EA is doomed. "When we are in reactionary periods—to have stalwart, beloved brands that are capable of sending this message is critical to society. But it's also critical that those brands keep the faith because, if they don't, they’re going to stop being brands," as they lose the ability to appeal to wide groups of people.

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In London's recollection, it was this kind of thinking that led to same-sex relatio

Source: PC Gamer