Thoughts on the Market

The Battle for the Future of Gaming


Listen Later

As AI changes the video game industry, Matt Cost, from Morgan Stanley’s U.S. Internet team, takes us through the game play and what could drive the next level of engagement.

Read more insights from Morgan Stanley.


----- Transcript -----


Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I’m Matt Cost, from Morgan Stanley’s U.S. Internet team. 

Today – how new AI tools are reshaping the video game industry. 

It’s Wednesday, May 27th, at 10am in New York. 

We’ve all done it at some point. You think you’ll open your phone for just a few minutes. But end up in a game, a match, or a virtual world for much longer than you planned. Now, that window of attention is at the heart of one of the biggest battles in entertainment. 

Americans over 15 years old spend about 22 minutes per day playing games – that’s more than they spend socializing, playing sports, or reading. And the next big shift in gaming may stem from who gets to create games and how they do it. 

We expect consumers to spend more than $275 billion on video games in 2026. And the industry is reinvesting over $50 billion of that into game development and operations. But AI could cut that by nearly half. 

Today, making a major game is expensive, slow, and labor-intensive. A typical AAA title – the gaming equivalent of a studio blockbuster – can cost hundreds of millions of dollars and take four years to build. More than 90 percent of that cost is people: so that’s developers, designers, artists, writers and many more. 

But AI could change that math. New tools could increase productivity multiple times over, helping smaller teams do more in less time. Even after accounting for AI compute and asset-generation expense, we think that cost savings could exceed 40 percent. That’s over $100 million per game project. Across the industry, that could generate savings of roughly $22 billion. 

But that money won’t just go straight to profits. Increased competition may erode those savings. And studios might put more money into marketing in response. So, AI could still meaningfully shift value across the gaming ecosystem.

The positives are clear. AI can speed up coding, asset creation, testing, and many other processes that are manual today. That’ll let studios spend less time on repetitive work and more time on higher-value creative tasks. 

But it’s tough for newcomers to level up. AI does open the door for new players, but we think the industry looks more insulated from near-term disruption than the market fears – especially for companies with strong IP and advantages in live operations, data, and distribution. 

AI can help generate worlds, characters, and digital assets, but great gameplay is harder. Gameplay is the feel, the challenge, the feedback, and the fun. Models still struggle to measure that, let alone deliver it consistently. 

Live operations are another moat for established gaming companies. Many successful games don’t end at launch. Teams run them for years through updates, events, and passionate communities. That skill is hard to copy. And often it determines whether a game becomes a lasting franchise or fades quickly. So gradual integration of AI looks more likely than overnight replacement. 

Finally, the largest opportunity may still be on the horizon. Beyond lowering the cost of making today’s games, AI could unlock entirely new types of interactive experiences that didn’t exist until now. And the game industry has been through this process before, when new technologies like smartphones changed games forever. But ultimately, the prize is still the same: building something that people can’t stop playing.

Thanks for listening. If you enjoy the show, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share Thoughts on the Market with a friend or colleague today.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Thoughts on the MarketBy Morgan Stanley

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

1,246 ratings


More shows like Thoughts on the Market

View all
WSJ Your Money Briefing by The Wall Street Journal

WSJ Your Money Briefing

1,713 Listeners

Exchanges by Goldman Sachs

Exchanges

977 Listeners

Bloomberg Intelligence by Bloomberg

Bloomberg Intelligence

406 Listeners

Bloomberg Surveillance by Bloomberg

Bloomberg Surveillance

1,173 Listeners

Masters in Business by Bloomberg

Masters in Business

2,175 Listeners

Notes on the Week Ahead by Dr. David Kelly

Notes on the Week Ahead

199 Listeners

WSJ Minute Briefing by The Wall Street Journal

WSJ Minute Briefing

686 Listeners

Wall Street Breakfast by Seeking Alpha

Wall Street Breakfast

1,044 Listeners

UBS On-Air: Market Moves by Client Strategy Office

UBS On-Air: Market Moves

191 Listeners

Making Sense by J.P. Morgan

Making Sense

71 Listeners

At Any Rate by J.P. Morgan Global Research

At Any Rate

80 Listeners

Barron's Streetwise by Barron's

Barron's Streetwise

1,573 Listeners

The Memo by Howard Marks by Oaktree Capital Management

The Memo by Howard Marks

435 Listeners

Barron's Live by Barron's Live

Barron's Live

212 Listeners

What Should I Do With My Money? by Morgan Stanley

What Should I Do With My Money?

118 Listeners

The Markets by Goldman Sachs

The Markets

80 Listeners

市場の風を読む by Morgan Stanley

市場の風を読む

0 Listeners