Anyone who runs a company needs a way to de-stress. For some CEOs that might mean golf or sailing. For Elon Musk, who runs or owns Tesla, SpaceX, and X (formerly Twitter), the main method is playing video games.

“It calms my mind. Killing the demons in a video game calms the demons in my mind,” Musk told podcaster Lex Fridman in an episode released Friday. He added later, “I’ve played a lot of video games because it’s my primary recreational activity.”

The world’s richest man also said, “My mind is a storm. I don’t think most people would want to be me. They may think they would want to be me, but they don’t, they don’t know, they don’t understand.”

Musk’s longtime companion Grimes, with whom he has three children, told biographer Walter Isaacson that Musk has no “hobbies or ways to relax other than video games, but he takes those so seriously that it gets very intense.”

Among his favorite titles is The Battle of Polytopia, billed as a “strategy game about building a civilization and going into battle.” Players compete to control resources and develop technologies, and they wage battles in order to build an empire. Musk’s brother Kimbal told Isaacson that his famous sibling said Polytopia “would teach me to be a CEO like he was.” The game was also fodder for a series of life and business lessons for Elon, with the first one being, “Empathy is not an asset.”

Another favorite of Musk’s is Elden Ring, centered on war and empire-building, which he told Fridman was a “candidate for the best game ever, top five for sure.” He added that it’s “incredibly creative” with “stunning” art.

“Beating hatred in the internal realm,” he added, “is the hardest boss battle in life and in the video game.”

Musk’s game-playing has also preceded some key business decisions. He pulled the trigger on buying Twitter right after playing Elden Ring until five in the morning, Grimes told Isaacson.

Mostly, Musk seems to use video games to get into a certain zone.

“If you play a tough video game, you can get into a state of flow which is very enjoyable. Admittedly it needs to be not too easy, not too hard—kind of in the Goldilocks zone,” he told Fridman.

“I guess you generally want to feel like you’re progressing in the game. And there’s also beautiful art, engaging storylines, and it’s like an amazing puzzle to solve.”

  • GarfieldYaoi [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Elon Musk could easily solve climate change with all the wealth he obtained from COVID that he got by sheer dumb luck, finance the future and be hailed as a hero for centuries and this was all part of his original brand too, I remember him publicizing the Tesla patents in the early 2010s. Sure, it might be a little dickish that he bought his way into heroism, but that’s at least one existential threat neutralized and maybe he can have some rights to be braggy. He could do it right now, as a 100 billionaire, we’ve gotten to a point where money is meaningless to him, he literally dropped 44 billion dollars to own the libs so what if as a public apology to the state of California, he instead spent that 44 billion funding the high-speed rail? (Ok, you can stop laughing now).

    Not to mention the insurance capitalism would have:

    the-republican : “See? You can totally trust corporations!”

    the-democrat: “The bourgeoisie aren’t the problem, it’s good bourgeoisie vs bad bourgeoisie”

    • Kaplya@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      He is on the US government payroll.

      Just a few years ago Tesla almost went broke, it was the Federal Government that bailed the company out and facilitated the explosive hike of its share in the stock market. The vast majority of his wealth came thanks to the US government.

      He is ultimately limited by what Deep State wants him to do.

    • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      I give you a hard time a lot but this is a great point. He has everything at his disposal to make himself an uncontroversial hero in the mainstream that will still be pointed to as a hero for as long as liberal capitalism survives, it just requires actually solving a problem instead of hyping up investors that he’ll solve a problem so he can sell them wildly overvalued stocks.

    • UlyssesT [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      He wants to be seen as a humanity savior. He doesn’t care about humanity whatoever except as a captive audience to whatever whims he has at the moment, the way a narcissistic father figure expects an entire household to toil and struggle for his amusement.

      • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        I think he wants to be seen as cool. Being marketed as a savior figure was one way into that, and was the one his PR firm took. After he fired them, he decided he could show everyone how cool he is by soypoint-1 posting memes soypoint-2