The Sacrifice Play: When One Company in a Portfolio Is Designed to Lose
In March 2026, Kakao — South Korea's dominant messaging and fintech platform — announced a deal that made headlines for all the right reasons: LY Corp, LINE Yahoo's investment vehicle, was injecting ₩300 billion into Kakao Games, becoming its new largest shareholder. The framing was classic: global ambitions, fresh capital, a Japanese tech giant entering Korean gaming. But the data told a different story. The Structure Underneath Kakao Games revenue had already collapsed — from ₩1.15 trillion in 2022 to ₩465 billion in 2025, a decline of nearly 60% in three years. Kakao, the parent, had simultaneously been pivoting toward AI, cutting its affiliate count from 147 to 94, shedding gaming subsidiaries like Nexports, Neptune, and Nimble Neuron. Kakao Games was not sold at its peak. It was sold on the descent — with Kakao retaining 14% and repositioning itself as an AI-focused platform while the subsidiary absorbed the legacy decline. The same week, a...