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Home Big Tech

From Warner Bros To World Cup Games, Netflix Is Buying Cultural Gravity

by Onyinye Moyosore
December 18, 2025
in Big Tech, Opinions
Reading Time: 3 mins read

Netflix is adding another cultural anchor to a growing collection it has been assembling over the years. Films. Series. Live formats. Games. Now FIFA.

Seen on its own, a World Cup-themed game looks like a side project. Seen in context, it fits a much larger pattern. Netflix is surrounding its audience with things they already care about and making sure those moments happen inside its ecosystem.

I’d say Netflix has outgrown its streaming label. It is already a household name. For many people, it is not one app among many. It is the default. But now, it is no longer trying to win the streaming wars alone. It is building something broader. An entertainment platform that spans formats, habits, and moments.

The FIFA game sits neatly inside that ambition.

Why FIFA Carries More Weight Than The Game

FIFA is not just a gaming brand. It is one of the most recognisable cultural properties in the world. The World Cup cuts across age, language, class, and geography in a way very few things do. For weeks at a time, football becomes the centre of global attention.

That is the value Netflix is buying into. A global rhythm that already exists. By tying a game to the World Cup, Netflix inserts itself into that rhythm without having to create it from scratch. The FIFA name does the heavy lifting. Netflix provides the distribution.

This is about proximity to attention, not competition with traditional game publishers.

Games As Cultural Glue

The FIFA game gives Netflix something useful during a World Cup year. A reason for users to stay inside the app before matches, between highlights, and after the tournament ends. It extends engagement without asking users to leave the ecosystem.

Netflix has been clear that its games are designed to be accessible. They are not chasing hardcore gamers or esports dominance. They are building light, familiar experiences that complement viewing habits. In that sense, the FIFA game functions like glue. It connects viewing, play, and fandom in one place.

Owning Moments, Not Just Content

When you place the FIFA game alongside Netflix’s broader moves, the strategy sharpens. This is the same company bidding for Warner Bros libraries, investing in live formats, and expanding its games catalogue inside a single subscription.

These are not random bets. Netflix is stacking cultural anchors that matter at different times. Film nights. Binge weekends. Sports seasons. Casual gaming moments. Each one gives users a reason to stay, return, and build habits. The value is not any single title. It is the accumulation of relevance across the year.

Owning content gets attention. Owning moments keeps it.

What This Signals About Netflix’s Endgame

Netflix is not trying to become a game publisher or a sports broadcaster in the traditional sense. It is trying to become the place where entertainment happens, regardless of format.

The FIFA game may be small compared to Netflix’s film and series budgets, but its strategic weight is larger than it looks. It shows a company comfortable borrowing cultural gravity instead of manufacturing it. Comfortable letting existing passions pull people deeper into its ecosystem.

Netflix is turning scale into leverage and familiarity into staying power. The streaming wars were only the beginning. What Netflix is building now looks much closer to an entertainment platform designed to last.

Onyinye Moyosore

Onyinye Moyosore

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