Lightspeed Names Industry Mogul To Lead $7 Billion Gaming Practice
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Moritz Baier-Lentz will serve as Lightspeed’s first-ever head of gaming.
Lightspeed
Lightspeed, a leading venture capital firm with over $18 billion under management across more than 500 investments in the U.S., Europe, and Asia–including Epic Games, Kongregate, and Tripledot Studios–has signalled its decision to accelerate its gaming practice with a major hire, who will lead its efforts to fund game studios, platforms, and technologies.
Moritz Baier-Lentz, who was named in Forbes’ finance 30 Under 30 in 2016, joins Lightspeed from BITKRAFT Ventures and will head up the organization’s consumer team as a partner, aiming to boost its 15-year investment history in the gaming sector. While Lightspeed has invested over $300 million into over 30 gaming deals since 2006, it has never had a dedicated gaming practice until today.
Growing up in rural Germany, Baier-Lentz has been a lifelong gamer, with his earliest industry success coming 20 years ago when he became the number-one ranked player in the world in Blizzard’s Diablo II in 2003. By trading weapons and armor within the game, he earned enough money to fund his tuition at Stanford Business School.
Baier-Lentz went on to become a vice president at Goldman Sachs, where he helped build and lead the firm’s global gaming practice, advising on deals across PC, console, and mobile platforms with Microsoft, Google, Meta, Activision, Meta, and Electronic Arts. He also advised on Dell’s $67 billion purchase of EMC, and IBM’s $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat.
In 2020, as a partner and management team member at BITKRAFT Ventures, Baier-Lentz helped it become one of the world’s most active gaming venture capital firms, leading a number of major deals including a $15 million Series A for Lightforge Games in March 2022. He also became a founding member and author of the World Economic Forum’s Metaverse Initiative, which aims to “define the parameters of an economically viable, interoperable, safe and inclusive metaverse.”
Lightspeed hopes to utilize Baier-Lentz’s expertise with team members across the organization’s 12 offices across the world to invest over $7 billion dollars in early and growth-stage entrepreneurs, building its gaming portfolio across five overarching themes:
Game studios “looking to become cross-media IP powerhouses”; Gaming platforms that hope to become social networks (e.g. the next Discord); Interactive and immersive technologies that shape 3D UX, etc. (e.g. a company in the mold of Unity or NVIDIA); Extended realities like VR and AR; and Web3 and gaming as experiences.
Additionally, the firm has announced plans to launch a gaming-specific website for “Lightspeed Gaming” at some point in late Q1 2023.