Meet Tim Sweeney: The Epic Games billionaire who quietly bought 50,000 acres of forest to save it from developers
While many tech billionaires are known for lavish homes, private islands or luxury yachts, one gaming executive has spent years quietly doing the opposite. Tim Sweeney, the founder and chief executive of Epic Games, has used a significant portion of his wealth to buy vast stretches of forest in North Carolina. His goal has not been development or profit, but protection. Over nearly two decades, Sweeney has purchased more than 50,000 acres of land across 15 counties, making him one of the largest private landowners in the state.
The purchases began quietly in 2008, just as the global financial crisis disrupted real estate markets and forced developers to abandon ambitious resort and housing projects. Sweeney saw a different opportunity. Instead of building on the land, he began acquiring forests and wilderness areas that were at risk of being transformed into golf resorts or luxury communities, with the intention of preserving them for wildlife and future generations.
Sweeney’s conservation effort began during the aftermath of the housing market collapse. At the time, many real estate developers who had purchased land in the Appalachian foothills were forced to sell after financing dried up.
Rather than letting those landscapes return to the development pipeline later, Sweeney started buying them himself. One of the most significant purchases was Box Creek Wilderness, a roughly 7,000-acre forest in the Blue Ridge foothills. The area is known for its ecological richness and contains more than 130 rare or threatened plant and animal species.
Sweeney reportedly paid about $15 million for the property after the crash, when prices had fallen sharply and there were few competing buyers.
Many of the land acquisitions have been handled through an LLC called “130 of Chatham.” Through this structure, Sweeney purchases land and holds it for years while conservation groups or public agencies arrange long-term protection.
Eventually, the land is often donated or sold at a steep discount to conservation organisations, state parks or federal agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
According to conservationists, this strategy allows ecologically valuable land to be secured quickly before development pressures return.
Sweeney’s conservation work became widely known in 2021 when he donated around 7,500 acres in the Roan Highlands to the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy. The donation is considered the largest private land gift in North Carolina’s history.
Carl Silverstein of the conservancy described the impact of the donation in a statement at the time, saying the land would remain permanently protected for wildlife, hikers and future generations.
“This extraordinary gift ensures that these remarkable mountain landscapes will remain intact forever,” the organisation said when the land transfer was announced.
The Roan Highlands are known for their rare spruce-fir ecosystems and spectacular rhododendron blooms, making them one of the most biologically diverse regions in the southern Appalachians.
In recent years, Sweeney has acknowledged that rising land prices have made it harder to continue buying new properties. Instead, he has shifted his focus to ensuring the tens of thousands of acres he already owns can never be developed.
Through conservation easements and legal agreements with land trusts, the forests are being placed under permanent protection, meaning they must remain preserved regardless of who owns them in the future.
Speaking to the News & Observer, Sweeney explained the goal simply:
“If you can protect land permanently, it will outlast any one person.”
Sweeney’s approach stands out even among wealthy philanthropists. Rather than funding buildings, institutions or public monuments, he has quietly invested in land that will remain largely untouched.
His wealth comes primarily from Epic Games, the company behind the global gaming phenomenon Fortnite and the widely used Unreal Engine game development platform. The company’s success has made Sweeney one of the richest figures in the gaming industry, with an estimated fortune of several billion dollars.
Yet much of that fortune has been channelled into forests, mountains and wilderness areas that many people may never know he helped protect.
For conservationists, Sweeney’s quiet campaign has helped preserve large stretches of biodiversity across the Appalachian region. By buying land when markets were weak and development seemed inevitable, he effectively removed thousands of acres from the commercial real estate pipeline.
Unlike buildings or monuments that age and depreciate, forests grow, regenerate and continue to support wildlife for centuries.
And in the mountains and forests of North Carolina, tens of thousands of acres will remain wild largely because a video game billionaire decided that some places should never be built on at all.
The purchases began quietly in 2008, just as the global financial crisis disrupted real estate markets and forced developers to abandon ambitious resort and housing projects. Sweeney saw a different opportunity. Instead of building on the land, he began acquiring forests and wilderness areas that were at risk of being transformed into golf resorts or luxury communities, with the intention of preserving them for wildlife and future generations.
How Tim Sweeney quietly began buying forests to keep developers away
Sweeney’s conservation effort began during the aftermath of the housing market collapse. At the time, many real estate developers who had purchased land in the Appalachian foothills were forced to sell after financing dried up.
Sweeney reportedly paid about $15 million for the property after the crash, when prices had fallen sharply and there were few competing buyers.
A quiet strategy through a little-known company
Many of the land acquisitions have been handled through an LLC called “130 of Chatham.” Through this structure, Sweeney purchases land and holds it for years while conservation groups or public agencies arrange long-term protection.
Eventually, the land is often donated or sold at a steep discount to conservation organisations, state parks or federal agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
According to conservationists, this strategy allows ecologically valuable land to be secured quickly before development pressures return.
One of the largest land donations in North Carolina history
Carl Silverstein of the conservancy described the impact of the donation in a statement at the time, saying the land would remain permanently protected for wildlife, hikers and future generations.
“This extraordinary gift ensures that these remarkable mountain landscapes will remain intact forever,” the organisation said when the land transfer was announced.
Turning temporary ownership into permanent protection
In recent years, Sweeney has acknowledged that rising land prices have made it harder to continue buying new properties. Instead, he has shifted his focus to ensuring the tens of thousands of acres he already owns can never be developed.
Through conservation easements and legal agreements with land trusts, the forests are being placed under permanent protection, meaning they must remain preserved regardless of who owns them in the future.
Speaking to the News & Observer, Sweeney explained the goal simply:
“If you can protect land permanently, it will outlast any one person.”
A billionaire choosing forests over fame
Sweeney’s approach stands out even among wealthy philanthropists. Rather than funding buildings, institutions or public monuments, he has quietly invested in land that will remain largely untouched.
Yet much of that fortune has been channelled into forests, mountains and wilderness areas that many people may never know he helped protect.
A legacy measured in landscapes
For conservationists, Sweeney’s quiet campaign has helped preserve large stretches of biodiversity across the Appalachian region. By buying land when markets were weak and development seemed inevitable, he effectively removed thousands of acres from the commercial real estate pipeline.
Unlike buildings or monuments that age and depreciate, forests grow, regenerate and continue to support wildlife for centuries.
And in the mountains and forests of North Carolina, tens of thousands of acres will remain wild largely because a video game billionaire decided that some places should never be built on at all.
Top Comment
n
null
4 days ago
In long time reading an article so appealing that if have few like MR SWEENY, this earth would be a better place for peace, environment n ecology. Wish him the best Read allPost comment
end of article
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