Sony PlayStation MENA Vice President Robert Fisser shares gaming vision for region 

Robert Fisser is the vice president and general manager of Sony PlayStation for the Middle East, Africa, Turkey, India, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan regions. (Supplied)
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Updated 03 January 2024
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Sony PlayStation MENA Vice President Robert Fisser shares gaming vision for region 

LONDON: With over 40 million PlayStation 5 units sold and countless blockbuster titles to choose from, Sony argues there’s never been a better time to be a fan of the console.

Arab News met Robert Fisser, vice president and general manager of Sony PlayStation for the Middle East, Africa, Turkey, India, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan, to learn more about his vision for the region.

“We’re blessed with a lot of gamers in the Middle East who are very passionate, they’re multiplatform and they play from between five minutes to five hours a day,” said Fisser.

Sony opened their Dubai office back in 2008 but were active in the region before that. Fisser spoke about how the company continued to see both growth and diversification in the gaming market — which should come as no surprise in a rapidly changing area that is passionate about console gaming. And, with over 2,500 titles to choose from, there is clearly something for everyone.  

Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 sees the gaming industry playing a key role in the Kingdom’s economy — with an aim, by the end of the decade, to see Riyadh attract or develop 250 video game companies, creating nearly 40,000 jobs and generating 1 percent of the country’s gross domestic product.  

Fisser acknowledges the scale of that ambition means “that the region is different from other parts of the world” in terms of positive government support, but also in how Sony thinks about each market in terms of their games and partnerships.

Fisser pointed to India Hero Project as an example of one of Sony’s new incubator programs which focuses on identifying and supporting emerging talent from different regions.

“In terms of what to get excited about right now it’s hard to look past the recent Sony blockbuster title, ‘Spider-Man 2,’ that’s enjoying incredible success,” said Fisser. The game sold more than 2.5 million copies within 24 hours to become the fastest-selling PlayStation Studios game in history.

In terms of gaming accessories, the new PlayStation Portal remote player allows households that share a television to keep gaming, whilst the PlayStation Virtual Reality system is offering gamers “a completely different experience,” according to Fisser.

Following the launch three years ago, PlayStation has now sold a milestone 40 million PS5 consoles and has now launched the new “slim” model just in time for the festive season. This is smaller, lighter and can connect to an ultra HD Blu-ray disc drive, but still packs the same gaming punch as the larger console.

In addition, the days of gamers struggling to secure the latest console are gone. Sony has plenty of hardware in stock and, added Fisser, “in a region that never stands still,” there is a host of exciting games on the horizon for 2024.


Kneecap delivers pro-Palestine message at Coachella

Updated 21 April 2025
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Kneecap delivers pro-Palestine message at Coachella

DUBAI: Irish band Kneecap took to the stage at the second week of the Coachella music festival in California to shine a light on Israel’s war against Palestine.

“Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinian people,” read a projection during the hip-hop trio’s performance. “It is being enabled by the US government who arm and fund Israel despite their war crimes.”

"The Palestinians have nowhere to go. It's their home, and they're bombing it from the sky. If you're not calling it a genocide, what are you calling it?" said Kneecap rapper Moglai Bap, who was wearing a keffiyeh.

The musician went on to lead the audience in a "free, free Palestine" chant.


Saudi-supported film to screen at Cannes parallel section ACID

Updated 21 April 2025
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Saudi-supported film to screen at Cannes parallel section ACID

DUBAI: ACID, a Cannes Film Festival parallel section, has announced the lineup for its 2025 edition, which includes the Red Sea Film Foundation-supported film “Life After Siham” from Egyptian filmmaker Namir Abdel Messeeh.

The autobiographical hybrid-documentary – supported by Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Fund – follows the director as he grieves his mother’s death while dealing with a creative impasse as he leads a writing workshop in Egypt.

The film follows two parallel tracks, mixing family footage the director shot before and after his mother’s passing against the fictional backdrop of a creative retreat set at the late Egyptian director Youssef Chahine’s one-time residence.

“The film will also be a portrait of contemporary Egypt,” Messeeh told Variety in an earlier interview. “Depicting a younger generation as they develop their own creative projects in post-revolution Egypt. Through them we’ll explore different facets of the modern country.”


Jennifer Lopez turns heads at F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix 

Updated 20 April 2025
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Jennifer Lopez turns heads at F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix 

JEDDAH: US superstar Jennifer Lopez turned heads at the F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in Jeddah ahead of her after-race performance.

The “Kiss of the Spider Woman” actress and singer made an appearance at the final practice on Saturday in a pink catsuit with a zipper down the front.

She performed on stage on Saturday night with a string of her most famous hits as part of an after-race concert lineup including Usher, Major Lazer, Peggy Gou and PartyNextDoor, alongside Arab stars such as Marwan Pablo, Tul8te, Hisham Abbas, Mostafa Amar and Hamid El-Shaeri.

Jennifer Lopez performed in Jeddah on Saturday night. (Supplied)

Widely regarded as one of the world’s most influential entertainers, Lopez has made her mark across music, film and television. She remains the only female artist to simultaneously top both the US box office and music charts, with over $3 billion in global box office earnings, more than 80 million records sold and billions of streams and views across her music catalogue.


Japan’s Koji Yamamura brings expertise to Saudi Film Festival masterclass

Updated 20 April 2025
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Japan’s Koji Yamamura brings expertise to Saudi Film Festival masterclass

DHAHRAN: Animation lovers attending the 11th Saudi Film Festival this week were treated to a masterclass by Oscar-nominated Japanese director Koji Yamamura.

Yamamura gave a masterclass titled “Giving Shape to Invisible Light” on Saturday.

While the Saudi Film Festival typically focuses on local and regional cinema, it also offers audiences a chance to engage with global voices. This year, Japan holds a special place in the lineup, with the festival running until April 23.

Masterclass attendees watched as Yamamura explained his process and shared several of his shorts, which he dissected, offering guidance and insight into his creative approach.

Yamamura, regarded as one of Japan’s most successful animation filmmakers, began creating films at just 13 years old. After six painstaking years and thousands of drawings, his 10-minute 2002 film “Mt. Head” earned him an Oscar nomination in the Best Short Film category.

The story follows a man who eats cherry pits to avoid waste, only to have a cherry tree sprout from his head. What begins as a nuisance quickly escalates into chaos as strangers flock to picnic and swim atop his head.

Narrated in the traditional rakugo style — with a single voice and sparse instrumentation — the work blends classical storytelling with modern themes. Beneath the dark humor lies a critique of isolationism, environmental degradation, and the illusion of control. The more the man tries to resist change, the more disorder he invites, leading to a haunting end.

Yamamura explained that many of his works were inspired by traditional tales that are over 150 years-old—stories where the beginning and end are already known — so the creative challenge lies in how he fills the space.

His work moves fluidly between absurdity and clarity, often occupying a Kafkaesque space that encourages the viewer to dive in until the narrative fully takes hold.

After the masterclass, he sat down to answer questions by moderator Naoures Rouissi of the Arab Film Festival Zurich, and the audience was invited to take part in a Q&A portion.

Abdulrahman Al-Qarzaee, a fluent Japanese speaker who is Saudi, translated.

“I’m very interested in Arabic culture. It is my first time in Saudi Arabia — I would like to sketch it. I think the landscape is very different from Japan,” Yamamura told Arab News after the session.

When Arab News asked if he might create a new work inspired by his visit to the Kingdom, he didn’t hesitate.

“Probably, yeah. This is a very special and different experience for me,” he concluded with a smile.


Saudi comedy film ‘Ambulance’ to get sequel

Updated 19 April 2025
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Saudi comedy film ‘Ambulance’ to get sequel

DUBAI: A sequel is already in the works for “Esaaf” (“Ambulance”), the new comedy starring Saudi actor and stand-up comedian Ibrahim Al-Hajjaj and directed by British filmmaker Colin Teague.

The film premiered on Tuesday, making history as the first Arabic-language movie to be released by Imax. 

The plot revolves around two Saudi paramedics who discover a briefcase containing holding SR2 million (around $533,300) and find themselves caught up in a dangerous kidnapping scheme.

The movie is written by Alberto Lopez and produced by Al-Hajjaj’s House of Comedy, Saudi producer Talal Anazi’s Black Light Operations and former MBC Studios chief Peter Smith in tandem with Saudi Media Company. 

The film marks Al-Hajjaj’s first major release since “Sattar,” the 2023 wrestling film which grossed over $30 million, primarily from Saudi audiences.