Home > Latest Updates >  The Video Game Industry’s Summertime Blues
";
BabyFace

BabyFace

Posted on  Aug 2,2009  12:08

The Video Game Industry’s Summertime Blues

Kathleen Byrnes and Justin Choi, a married couple attending medical school Apple Store Discount on Office 2008 for Mac – Home and Student Edition . Click here. at Tulane University, say US$40 is just too much to fork over for a Nintendo More about Nintendo Wii More about Wii game they might not enjoy. They haven’t bought one since last fall, when they picked up “Star Wars: The Force Unleashed.”

Since then? “Nothing really interesting came out,” said Byrnes, 23.

Their reluctance helps explain why this is a rough summer for the video game business. More people than ever are playing the games, but it’s been a while since a blockbuster title arrived. Consumers are watching their money more closely in the recession and managing to resist games that can cost as much as $60.

The trends came into focus Thursday as Sony (NYSE: SNE) More about Sony and Nintendo each reported console sales Download Free eBook – The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales are dropping. Sony posted a loss for the April-June quarter, while Nintendo revealed a large drop in its profit.

The Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) More about Microsoft division that makes the Xbox 360 More about Xbox 360 said last week it lost money in the last quarter too.

“The health of the industry is terrible,” said Wedbush Morgan analyst Michael Pachter.
Budging Prices?

For gamers, at least, there’s some good news: Console prices will probably come down.

Sony’s PlayStation 3 More about PlayStation 3, the costliest of the bunch, still sells for $400. Nintendo hasn’t lowered the $250 tag on the Wii since its 2006 launch — an extreme rarity for an industry that relies on regular price cuts to broaden its audience.

Despite the bad earnings results Thursday, Sony and Nintendo both reaffirmed their forecasts for the year. Pachter thinks each company “has no prayer” of meeting the target without cutting prices to lure buyers. In Nintendo’s case, that might mean keeping the Wii at $250 but throwing in more free games.

At first, it didn’t seem the recession would be big trouble for the video game business, which has managed to expand its audience in recent years and become a mainstream form of entertainment. By many estimates, the video game industry is now larger than the music business.

Sony, Nintendo and Microsoft, as well as software publishers like Electronic Arts (Nasdaq: ERTS) More about Electronic Arts and retailers like GameStop, have pitched video games as cheap entertainment. Players can get many more hours in front of a TV screen from a $60 video game than from a $25 DVD.

However, people squeezed by the economy may not have even that to spend. Many have turned to online games that are cheaper or free. Even loyal, “hardcore” gamers are being more selective instead of lining up to buy every new release, and many are trading used games among themselves.
Hit Me With Your Best Shot

They’re also waiting for bigger, better titles coming later in the year — in the holiday season, when video game companies often roll out their biggest blockbusters. With many players now expecting something close to movie quality in their games, these titles can take years and tens of millions of dollars to develop.

When the spring of 2008 brought massive hits like “Grand Theft Auto IV” and the exercise game “Wii Fit,” that was an exception. “Grand Theft Auto IV” raked in more than $500 million in its first week in stores.

Last year’s big spring would have made for tough comparisons this year even in normal circumstances. However, by industry standards, the first half of 2009 has been unusually slow when it comes to top-flight game launches. Combine that with the recession, and you get one chilly summer.
Where’s the Action?

Ben Nielsen, a 29-year-old architectural designer in Portland, Ore., usually buys three or four games a year. This year he’s gotten only one: “Mirror’s Edge” for the Xbox 360. And that’s only because it was on sale, at $30.

He also has a Wii, but for that system, Nielsen said he hasn’t seen “anything compelling enough to buy, especially considering the pay cut we took at my firm earlier this year.”

Byrnes and Choi might spring for the $50 “Wii Sports Resort,” a recently launched follow to the “Wii Sports” game that comes with the Wii and buoyed its popularity. “Wii Sports Resort” also comes with an accessory that attaches to the Wii’s controller to make it more sensitive.

In general, though, they remain cautious. They own seven games for their Wii, and say they were disappointed with about half of them.

“With that kind of a track record,” said Choi, who is 25, “we are not about to take more chances on future titles.”

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
Comments
  1. No comments yet.
";
1
World of Lordcraft

World of Lordcraft (Age of Warcraft) is a Chinese browser game inspired by World of Warcraft, while the game is a strategy online game like War of Legends, Lords Online and more.  The game was released in China in 2009, shortly, it scored a big success despite the stereotyped strategy system. In 2010, the game [...]

2
Europe 1400

It is the year 1400: Trade is thriving and culture is blossoming in the metropolises…
Enter the ever-growing cities of Europe 1400, seize your chance and fight your unflinching way to the top:
Find your purpose in life as a craftsman, merchant, rascal or as God’s servant!
This medieval world gives you endless opportunities for personal development:
Discover the [...]

3
WWII Assembly

WWII Assembly is a great browser strategy game set in the second World War, when the two opposing sides the Allies and the Axis are involved in the conflict, spanning from 1939 to 1945. Among the two factions, there are great great powers and nations engaging in the warfare.

By following the realistic browser game WW2 [...]

4
Leelh

Leelh is a French post-apocalyptic real-time action browser MMORPG playable directly in a web browser. The player is plunged in 2087, and must survive in a hostile environment against other survivors.
Leelh is fully 3D game where you play as a survivor in a post-apo. A wide range of talents and skills according to your level [...]

5
Forsakia – The Lost Clans

Are you ready for a whole new MMOG experience?
Alaplaya’s all new free 2 play experience: high quality graphics in a beautiful fantasy world with all features you love from client MMOGs – monster fights, PVP, Pets, Housing, Crafting and much more.
Best of all you can access all this from everywhere in the world. All you [...]


";