tal onzy
Donor
- Joined
- May 21, 2014
- Messages
- 1,179
- Reaction score
- 163
andy chalk pc gamer
Market research firm Superdata says the digital games market in 2015 was worth $61 billion across all platforms, an increase of eight percent over 2014. Digital sales on consoles saw the greatest year-over-year jump at 34 percent, but the big dog in the digital pack was none other than League of Legends, with 2015 revenues of $1.6 billion dollars.
Number two on the overall list is the mobile game Clash of Clans, which pulled in a very impressive $1.3 billion over the year. But the PC rounds out the top five with Smilegate's Crossfire (which will soon be brought to the West by Starbreeze) at $1.1 billion, Dungeon Fighter Online from Neople at $1.05 billion, and the ancient, immortal World of Warcraft, which in its 11th year of existence earned $814 million dollars.
Perhaps unexpectedly, given the rise of mobile gaming, the report also states that the top ten PC games actually pull in more money than the top ten mobile games, with $6.3 billion earned on PC compared to $6.1 billion on mobile. The overall gap in market value is even wider.
“PC-based gaming—consisting of free-to-play MMOs, subscription-based games like World of Warcraft, social games and PC downloadable games—earns over $32 billion annually, well above the $25.1 billion generated by mobile games,” the report states. “Three of the year’s top five digital PC games (Grand Theft Auto V, Fallout 4 and The Witcher 3) were released in 2015, indicating that PC gamers have made significant progress transitioning to purchasing games digitally.”
The full list of top-grossing PC games in 2015, in millions:
1.League of Legends (Tencent/Riot Games): $1,628
2.CrossFire (SmileGate): $1,110
3.Dungeon Fighter Online (Neople): $1,052
4.World of Warcraft (Activision Blizzard): $814
5.World of Tanks (Wargaming.net): $446
6.Lineage 1 (NCsoft): $339
7.Maplestory (Nexon): $253
8.DOTA 2 (Valve): $238
9.Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (Valve): $221
10.Grand Theft Auto V (Take-Two Interactive): $205
Market research firm Superdata says the digital games market in 2015 was worth $61 billion across all platforms, an increase of eight percent over 2014. Digital sales on consoles saw the greatest year-over-year jump at 34 percent, but the big dog in the digital pack was none other than League of Legends, with 2015 revenues of $1.6 billion dollars.
Number two on the overall list is the mobile game Clash of Clans, which pulled in a very impressive $1.3 billion over the year. But the PC rounds out the top five with Smilegate's Crossfire (which will soon be brought to the West by Starbreeze) at $1.1 billion, Dungeon Fighter Online from Neople at $1.05 billion, and the ancient, immortal World of Warcraft, which in its 11th year of existence earned $814 million dollars.
Perhaps unexpectedly, given the rise of mobile gaming, the report also states that the top ten PC games actually pull in more money than the top ten mobile games, with $6.3 billion earned on PC compared to $6.1 billion on mobile. The overall gap in market value is even wider.
“PC-based gaming—consisting of free-to-play MMOs, subscription-based games like World of Warcraft, social games and PC downloadable games—earns over $32 billion annually, well above the $25.1 billion generated by mobile games,” the report states. “Three of the year’s top five digital PC games (Grand Theft Auto V, Fallout 4 and The Witcher 3) were released in 2015, indicating that PC gamers have made significant progress transitioning to purchasing games digitally.”
The full list of top-grossing PC games in 2015, in millions:
1.League of Legends (Tencent/Riot Games): $1,628
2.CrossFire (SmileGate): $1,110
3.Dungeon Fighter Online (Neople): $1,052
4.World of Warcraft (Activision Blizzard): $814
5.World of Tanks (Wargaming.net): $446
6.Lineage 1 (NCsoft): $339
7.Maplestory (Nexon): $253
8.DOTA 2 (Valve): $238
9.Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (Valve): $221
10.Grand Theft Auto V (Take-Two Interactive): $205