By someone who still believes tech should serve people, not the other way around.
Let’s face it — 2025 isn’t just the year of artificial intelligence. It’s the year of artificial promises, real scandals, and companies pretending to care while fighting tooth and nail for market dominance. While some giants are reaching for the stars (literally), others are digging holes so deep they may never crawl out. Let’s unpack the chaos — one company at a time.
🔥 OpenAI — The Brains Behind the Bots (and the Battles)
OpenAI started the year like a tech messiah. It gave us GPT-5, video-generating Sora, and enough developer tools to make half the internet autonomous. But behind the brilliance? A fight for control. Lawsuits, sudden license changes, and rumors of internal power struggles show that even the “do-good” AI godfather is now playing the same dirty game as everyone else.
The problem? No one knows who’s in control — the engineers, the investors, or the machine itself.
🧠 Google (Alphabet) — The Tech Behemoth That Knows Too Much
Quantum supremacy? Check. Dominating AI with Gemini? Check. Accused of monopolizing everything from search to the temperature of your living room? Also check.
Google remains the company that knows what you want before you do — but in 2025, the world is finally starting to ask: Should it?
And yet, here we are — still Googling “how to delete my Google account” on Google.
📦 Amazon — Still Prime, but Not So Fine
Behind the sleek same-day deliveries and Alexa’s chipper voice lies a grim reality: layoffs, union clashes, and the silent suffering of warehouse workers treated more like machine extensions than humans.
Amazon promised innovation. What we got instead was a robot telling us our package will be late — but HR will be early with a pink slip.
📱 TikTok / ByteDance — Dancing at the Edge of a Ban
TikTok in 2025 feels like a teenager being grounded by every adult in the room. The U.S. government is threatening bans (again), and ByteDance is scrambling to build a clone app (M2) just to survive in America.
Creators are confused. Politicians are posturing. And meanwhile, a 14-year-old in Nebraska still goes viral for lip-syncing to a song no one remembers.
🧢 Meta (formerly Facebook) — The Metaverse Hangover
Mark Zuckerberg’s dream of a VR utopia is fading fast. Horizon Worlds is a digital ghost town, and the “metaverse revolution” is now a business school case study in overhype.
Meta is pivoting — again — now to AI avatars. Because if you can’t make people care about virtual legs, maybe at least they’ll like a chatbot that flirts.
🚘 Tesla — Innovation at the Speed of Elon’s Tweets
Tesla in 2025 is still a cult — equal parts genius and chaos. Robotaxis? Delayed. Tesla Phone? Ghosted. Safety lawsuits? Still piling up.
And yet, people keep buying. Because deep down, we all wonder what madness Musk will cook up next. He’s no longer just a CEO — he’s a global spectacle with a dashboard.
🎮 Rockstar Games — Milking the Past, Delaying the Future
It’s been over a decade since GTA V. And now, GTA VI is delayed again — May 2026 if we’re lucky. Rockstar shut down Social Club, teased a mansion update, and maybe, just maybe, will release GTA IV remastered for the 3rd time.
Gamers are tired. They want chaos on the streets, not chaos in the PR department.
🧮 NVIDIA — King of Chips, Slave to Demand
NVIDIA owns the AI gold rush. But GPUs are scarce, prices absurd, and gamers have to mortgage kidneys just to buy a card. Their dominance is absolute — and that’s the problem.
They’ve become the oil barons of the digital age. And they’re charging by the byte.
🍎 Apple — Innovation or Imitation?
Apple finally switched to USB-C. Congrats, Europe. Rumors say they’ll kill the iPhone soon — replaced by AR glasses that no one asked for.
Is Apple still innovating? Or are they just removing ports and calling it design?
🪐 SpaceX — The One Company That’s Still Dreaming Big
Yes, launches explode. Yes, timelines slip. But SpaceX is still reaching — to the Moon, to Mars, and beyond.
While the rest of Silicon Valley argues over filters, SpaceX reminds us what ambition actually looks like.
🧩 Towards the end…
2025 isn’t about “good vs bad” companies anymore. It’s about intent vs impact. These corporations don’t just shape tech — they shape culture, privacy, opportunity, and the very way we think. And in a world ruled by algorithms, we need to stop asking “what’s new” and start asking:
“Who is this really for?”
Written with caffeine, frustration, and a slight sense of awe at how wild the tech world has become.

