SubscribeJoin the newsletter to get the latest updates.Niantic is selling Pokmon Go, Pikmin Bloom, and Monster Hunter Now to Scopely, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a Saudi Arabian company called Savvy Games, which itself is owned by the Saudi Arabian governments Public Investment Fund. Scopely, Niantic, and Savvy Games have collectively published six separate blog posts about the $3.85 billion deal, none of which specifically address what is happening with the location data of Pokmon Gos 100 million players and none of which address how location data collected in the future will be handled under Scopely and its Saudi Arabian owners.Two other apps, called Campfire and Wayfarer, are also part of the deal. Campfire is a tool that lets people meet up in the real world to play Pokmon Go (or other Niantic games) together, and Wayfarer is an app that specifically leverages the players of Niantic games to map real-world locations for Pokmon Go. Niantic will keep Ingress, its first augmented reality game, and another game called Peridot.