July 12, 2004 12:28 PM PDT

Study: Online-game revenue to skyrocket

Revenue from online games will grow threefold to $1.1 billion by 2008, helping the nascent industry corner 10 percent of the global video game market, according to a new study by The Yankee Group.

The boom in this niche could be a saving grace for the game industry, which is expected to see fluctuating hardware and software sales in the coming years.

Falling console prices are a big driver in the shift, Yankee said. Priced at $299 when they launched, console prices are expected to fall to as low as $49 within the next five years.

Currently, sales and subscriptions to Web-based games generate $353 million. Online-game advertisements generate between $450 million and $550 million, the research company said.

One segment that's giving the online-game industry a boost is "massively multiplayer online games." According to the Yankee study, in the United States alone, there will be 5.2 million people subscribing to these games by 2008, generating $556 million in revenue. By comparison, the approximate number of people subscribed to these games in 2003 was 2.4 million, with a revenue base of $209 million.

Asia is said to be the next big market for massively multiplayer online games. While most retail game publishers in the United States have so far ignored Asia because of widespread piracy there, that's less of a problem with games that have huge subscriber bases, because the bulk of the revenue from those games is derived from monthly subscriptions. Many online-game developers have been eyeing China because of its sheer market size.

Additionally, broadband penetration is greater in some Asian countries, such as South Korea, which has the largest per capita broadband deployment in the world, with about 60 percent of households subscribing to broadband. Overall, this has made online games a bigger business in Asia than in the United States or Europe. Many broadband service providers, such as Comcast, are providing subscription-based on-demand game services.

Games sold on CDs and Web-based PC games are not expected to contribute as much to the industry as massively multiplayer online games, Yankee predicted.

"PC gamers are migrating to consoles, causing revenues for PC games on CD-ROMs to decline and console revenue to grow. Online gaming represents a shift in revenue, away from boxed CD-ROM games sold at retail to online sales," Michael Goodman, Yankee's senior analyst for Media & Entertainment Strategies, said in a statement.

Competitors in the online console game niche are already experiencing cutthroat competition. Of 41.1 million video game consoles installed in the United States at the end of 2003, 3.3 million were online. The study forecasts that this number will jump to 8 million by 2008 as the big players--Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo--launch next-generation consoles that have better online capabilities.

See more CNET content tagged:
multiplayer online game, online game, Asia, console, broadband

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
I have a little differnt take......
by July 12, 2004 12:53 PM PDT
I do extensive research in all home technology fields and I think Yankee Group is missing the picture when they say that PC/CD sales will continue to fall into the future. I feel in the immediate future this will be true but by the 3 year mark this will all change. Any gammer that has played both console and PC games knows the advantage of visual quality in PC gamming. Apex Digital is releasing the first PC console very soon at the $500 price point. Bottom line by the 3 to 5 year mark the price points of large HD displays and PC price points versus consoles will be very close. The only real difference between the (2) in 3 years will be the interopability of games, which PC will have the advantage. The only cog in my vision is if game makers don't make PC titles just to prevent this from happening.
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