HoYoverse is reportedly planning to invest up to $14.6 billion in artificial intelligence over the next three years, one of the biggest AI investments ever announced by a gaming company.
The company is building its own AI technology instead of relying mostly on third-party providers.
Planned investments include:
>Dedicated GPU clusters
>Internal AI model training systems
>AI application infrastructure
>Production tools for game development and live-service operations
The AI is expected to support:
>NPC behavior and dialogue systems
>Content generation workflows
>Automation tools
>Live-service management for ongoing games
HoYoverse’s upcoming life-simulation game Petit Planet is expected to feature AI-powered NPC interactions.
Pavel Durov, the founder of Telegram, has said that the app has “never disclosed a single byte of private messages” to any third party in its 12-year history.
His statement comes as he and Telegram face ongoing legal issues in France over the platform’s alleged lack of cooperation with criminal investigations.
Durov also said that Telegram only shares limited information like IP addresses and phone numbers of criminal suspects when required under valid legal requests, but not private message content.
Meta says it may have to shut down Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp for everyone in New Mexico.
The company issued this warning in a court document as part of an ongoing lawsuit that New Mexico started in 2023.
The state claims Meta let kids see harmful and addictive content, including messages from predators, and did not tell families the truth about the risks.
In March 2026, a jury agreed with the state and ordered Meta to pay a $375 million fine.
The state now wants major changes including:
-stronger age verification checks
-safety-first content suggestions
-private accounts by default for kids
-easier ways to report and block users.
Meta says these rules are too difficult and too expensive and would need to create separate versions of its apps just for New Mexico
The company adds that it does not want to shut down service in the state but may have no other choice if the court orders full compliance.
New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez called the warning a pressure tactic. He said the real issue is protecting children, not company profits.