Billionaire Elon Musk also doesn't like Sweet Baby Inc.

Billionaire Elon Musk said he hopes Sweet Baby Inc. will go bankrupt soon.

images 1 of Billionaire Elon Musk also doesn't like Sweet Baby Inc.

In recent times, the number one enemy of the gaming community has undoubtedly been none other than the consulting firm Sweet Baby Inc. Not only is it blamed for the decline in storylines and characters of major games over the years, but the company has also been embroiled in numerous controversies recently, including employee Chris Kindred calling for reports of Sweet Baby Inc. curator detection, insulting Akira Toriyama (the recently deceased creator of Dragon Ball), and most recently, demanding that Capcom remove streamer Asmongold from the upcoming Dragon's Dogma 2 game.

And now, the entire gaming community, including the current 'richest gamer in the world' Elon Musk, is showing a strong dislike for this company. The owner of Twitter/X recently tweeted that he sees the company as a terrible disease of the gaming industry, making games worse and only good at canceling others. He also said he hopes the company goes bankrupt soon.

Sweet Baby Inc is an evil blight on the gaming industry. All they do is make games terrible and try to cancel people.

They cannot go broke soon enough!

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 16, 2024

It's unclear whether Chris Kindred and his company intend to call for reporting Elon Musk's account, as he is the owner of this platform. After all, the person with the most influence on Twitter is none other than the eccentric billionaire; his apparent dislike of Sweet Baby Inc. is enough to create a devastating tsunami that could completely engulf the company on social media.

Elon Musk isn't exactly a fan favorite among gamers, but given his statement, there's no reason not to support him.

Update 25 March 2026

Kareem Winters

Kareem Winters is an AI integration expert, a strategic process of embedding artificial intelligence technologies—such as machine learning (ML), natural language processing (NLP), and computer vision—directly into an organization's existing systems, applications, and workflows.

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