2010-11-30 12:07 by Gaming Xpress Team
A new report published today by Juniper Research forecasts that
revenues from in-game purchases will overtake the traditional
pay-per-download model as the primary source of monetising mobile games
by 2013. With Apple’s in-app billing mechanism showing the way forward,
total end-user revenues will surpass $11 billion annually by 2015,
nearly double what they were in 2009 ($6bn).
An increasing number of games are being offered free at the point of
purchase, in order to garner attention, with in-game purchases – which
include extra gaming levels or gameplay items – being utilised by
developers and publishers to monetise the game once the user has been
given a taste of what the game has to offer. However, discoverability
remains a problem for developers and publishers on some app stores,
given that many now contain 100,000s of applications, the majority of
which are mobile games.
According to Mobile Games report
author Daniel Ashdown, "Discoverability can be a “chicken and egg”
problem: high downloads lead to prominence, but achieving a high number
of downloads is largely dependent on already being prominent.
Consequently, a small minority of games achieve very high downloads,
whilst the vast majority achieve very small download figures."
Nevertheless, Juniper Research’s report finds that the mobile games
industry is in a much healthier state than it was when the last edition
was published. Apple’s iPhone/App Store combination has set the
benchmark, with a higher share of revenue for developers, and
development platforms which take advantage of advancements in handset
technology, as discussed in the report.
The Mobile Games video whitepaper is available to view on www.juniperresearch.com together with the whitepaper, High Score for Mobile Games and further details of the study Mobile Games: App Store Strategies, Business Models & Forecasts 2010-2015.
Juniper Research
provides research and analytical services to the global hi-tech
communications sector, providing consultancy, analyst reports and
industry commentary.