Core Gaming is Bringing 40 Million MAUs to the Nasdaq, as an AI-Driven Mobile Gaming Titan Emerges via Siyata Mobile Merger
DENVER, Colo., Mar 17, 2025 (247marketnews.com)- The Nasdaq is gearing up for a new player that’s set to shake up the mobile gaming arena, Core Gaming.
Core Gaming, a global leader in AI-driven mobile gaming, is poised to go public through a transformative $160 million merger with Siyata Mobile (NASDAQ:SYTA). Announced on February 26, 2025, this reverse merger catapults Core Gaming—a privately held powerhouse with $80 million in 2024 unaudited revenue—onto the world’s premier tech exchange, leveraging Siyata’s listing to unlock its rapid growth potential in the $126 billion mobile gaming market. Trading at around $2, SYTA’s modest $2 million market cap belies the seismic shift this deal represents, positioning Core Gaming alongside AI and gaming giants like AppLovin, Triller, and Zenia.
Core Gaming boasts 40 million monthly active users, 600 million downloads, and a portfolio of over 2,000 casual mobile games across 140+ countries, Core Gaming mirrors the multi-pronged brilliance of AppLovin (NASDAQ:APP), Nasdaq’s 2024 standout with a 700% share surge. Like AppLovin, Core Gaming doesn’t just develop games—it’s a publishing juggernaut, amplifying third-party developers’ reach while raking in ad revenue and platform fees. Its cutting-edge AI tools span text, language, image, and video models, which slash production time by 40% and boost content output by 50%. This echoes AppLovin’s tech-driven edge, where algorithms optimize user acquisition and monetization, propelling it to an $87 billion market cap despite a 2025 pullback to $260 per share.
The parallels don’t stop there. Core Gaming’s global footprint and AI agility draw comparisons to Triller (NASDAQ:ILLR), the AI-powered social video platform that’s danced its way into public markets via a SPAC merger. Triller’s focus on short-form content and algorithmic engagement aligns with Core Gaming’s knack for hooking casual gamers—think endless scroll meets endless play. Both wield AI to curate experiences, though Core’s 40 million MAUs dwarf Triller’s reach, hinting at a scale that could rival bigger players once Nasdaq liquidity kicks in.
Then there’s Zenia, a lesser-known AI stock blending virtual assistants with interactive tech—Core Gaming’s algorithmic niche-targeting (spotting under-served gaming gaps) shares Zenia’s ethos of personalized, tech-first disruption, albeit in a more entertainment-focused lane.
Here’s the kicker: some of Core Gaming’s 40 million MAUs aren’t just players. Among those 40 million monthly players, a chunk are likely crypto bros—tech-savvy, risk-embracing gamers already dabbling in blockchain tokens and digital assets- who’re trading with their Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD) account and driving the Webull narratives.. With mobile gaming’s overlap into crypto culture (think in-game NFTs or play-to-earn models), Core could tap this crowd via targeted campaigns—think app notifications or loyalty perks—nudging them to snag SYTA shares post-merger. Even if just 0.1% (40,000 users) buy in at these low prices, that’s a larger stakeholder base than many stocks and a grassroots boost AppLovin or Unity never tapped.
This merger flips Siyata Mobile’s script into a gamified twist on shareholder growth, blending fandom with finance.
Once a niche vendor of Push-to-Talk over Cellular (PoC) handsets—think rugged comms for first responders—Siyata’s pivot hands the reins to Core Gaming’s CEO, Aitan Zacharin, with outgoing CEO Marc Seelenfreund steering a PoC subsidiary of the combined company.
Legacy SYTA shareholders snag a 10% stake in the combined entity via a special stock dividend, a safety net ensuring they ride Core’s wave regardless of market flux. SYTA’s price tags this as a bargain and Zacharin’s eyeing $100 million in 2025 with profitability in sight.
Core Gaming’s Nasdaq debut slots it among AI and gaming peers like Unity Software (NYSE:U) and Roblox (NYSE:RBLX), though its publishing heft and AI efficiency carve a unique niche. Unity’s 3D engine powers creators; Core’s AI churns out games at scale. Roblox thrives on user-generated worlds; Core bets on casual breadth.
Against Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ:TTWO) or Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:EA), Core’s leaner, mobile-first model—unburdened by AAA console heft—offers agility in a market where casual gaming drives 75% of app store revenue. Its 50% production boost via AI mirrors the automation trends lifting stocks like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), whose chips power gaming’s backend—Core’s front-end innovation could be the next link in that chain.
If Core hits its $100 million target, SYTA could mirror AppLovin’s early ascent—or Triller’s SPAC-fueled buzz—before the big dogs muscle in.
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