Toronto Star

Nintendo makes big move over to mobile

Animal Crossing series gets first smartphone iteration

- YUJI NAKAMURA

TOKYO— Nintendo Co. has made its biggest move in mobile gaming so far with plans to add Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp as its third smartphone title.

The game will be available on both Apple Inc.’s iOS and Android from late November and is the first smartphone iteration of a popular series about anthropomo­rphic animals. It will be free to download but allow in-game purchases to speed up progress, a key to making money from such titles.

Analysts have high expectatio­ns for the new game, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimating an Animal Crossing title could generate twice as much revenue as the combined sales of Nintendo’s two previous smartphone games — Super Mario Run and Fire Emblem Heroes. In the June quarter, Nintendo reaped 9.1 billion yen ($102.5 million) from its smartphone business. The company is due to report earnings for the September quarter on Monday.

“The IP is often underestim­ated, but chances are Animal Crossing on mobile can become a big hit,” said Serkan Toto, founder of consultant Kantan Games Inc. “The game seems to offer high production value, mobile-optimized gameplay and depth to make sure people keep coming back over and over.”

Shares of Nintendo rose 0.1per cent to 44,140 yen at the close of trade in Tokyo after earlier gaining as much as 2.7 per cent.

The stock has surged 80 per cent this year and its market value has swelled to about $55 billion. DeNA Co., Nintendo’s partner in smartphone games, dropped 3.5 per cent after gaining 7.8 per cent yesterday.

The Animal Crossing series debuted in 2001 on the Nintendo 64 console, with subsequent versions appearing on the company’s DS and 3DS hand-held devices, where they sold more than 20 million copies. The title has gained a strong following by giving animals memorable personalit­ies and creating a commu- nity with various activities.

The new mobile game involves players befriendin­g animals and completing errands for them to collect rewards, which can then be used to build a customized camp site. To save time, players can choose to spend real money instead of completing tasks.

For example, Nintendo’s video showed it could take five hours to build a drum set for a camp site. Players could skip the wait by spending 30 “leaf tickets.” Prices start from $0.99 for 20 tickets.

Players can also earn leaf tickets for free by completing in-game tasks, like harvesting apples or catching fish. But some tasks were limited to how many times they can be performed each day, in effect bringing players back to choosing whether to wait or spend real money on leaf tickets. “The monetizati­on seems to be more aggressive than the casual appeal the title suggests,” said Toto. “A high-quality mobile version of Animal Crossing can become a longterm cash machine for Nintendo.”

Players can also buy in-game items with real money, like clothes to customize their characters or paint jobs for their camper cars. In April, Citigroup Inc. estimated the game would generate 14 billion yen in sales in the current fiscal year, on the assumption it will attract 18 million users.

Nintendo president Tatsumi Kimishima has said the company will release about two to three smartphone games per year, implying at least one more title could be released by March 2018.

 ??  ?? Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp (not the version pictured) will be available on iOS and Android in late November.
Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp (not the version pictured) will be available on iOS and Android in late November.

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