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Riot quickly drops controversial LEC sponsor after outrage from devs, community

Updated: Riot has announced it is dumping its partnership with Saudi Arabia's NEOM project after devs, players, protest Saudi Arabian anti-LGBT connections.

Alissa McAloon, Publisher

July 29, 2020

3 Min Read
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Update 7/29 9:45 PM ET: In a new statement, Riot Games announced it is junking its partnership with NEOM.

“As a company and as a league, we know that it’s important to recognize when we make mistakes and quickly work to correct them. After further reflection, while we remain steadfastly committed to all of our players and fans worldwide including those living in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East, the LEC has ended its partnership with NEOM, effective immediately."

"In an effort to expand our esports ecosystem, we moved too quickly to cement this partnership and caused rifts in the very community we seek to grow. While we missed our own expectations in this instance, we’re committed to reexamining our internal structures to ensure this doesn't happen again.”

The original story can be found below:

 

Riot's LEC league partners with openly anti-LGBT sponsor, and Riot devs are furious

Riot Games’ League of Legends European Championship (LEC) looks to be one of the few major organizations that kept its Pride-flavored Twitter icons beyond the month of June, but now that visual promise of inclusion and support is incongruently paired with the announcement that NEOM is sponsoring LEC’s Summer 2020 season

The announcement, which praised Saudi Arabia’s NEOM project as a groundbreaking addition to its sponsorship lineup, rapidly faced criticism online, including messages of disappointment from prominent players, esports casters, and Riot Games devs alike. 

NEOM itself is the source of the controversy. The city is a creation of the Saudi Arabian government, conceived under a regime with a history of human rights abuses that include persecution of LGBT persons and other transgressions against human rights.

According to The Guardian, a portion of the actual construction of the $500 billion futuristic city that boasts “better humans, better society” in its marketing is also taking place on land belonging to the Huwaitat tribe and forcibly displacing those currently living in that area.

Those involved with Riot, from esports players and casters to the developers behind the games featured in the league, are speaking out against the partnership en masse online.

To pour salt on the wound, the sponsorship follows promises of inclusion from Riot Games made in recent years following earlier allegations of a toxic and sexist company culture throughout Riot as a whole. That includes a recent op-ed from Riot Games CEO Nicolo Laurent (via GamesIndustry.biz) published the day before yesterday titled “Lessons learned guiding Riot Games through a cultural crisis”, further casting doubt on leadership’s ability to back up its words with action.

About the Author

Alissa McAloon

Publisher, GameDeveloper.com

As the Publisher of Game Developer, Alissa McAloon brings a decade of experience in the video game industry and media. When not working in the world of B2B game journalism, Alissa enjoys spending her time in the worlds of immersive sandbox games or dabbling in the occasional TTRPG.

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