China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shift from PC to mobile sends revenue soaring

- By KARL WILSON

Personal computers continue to be the dominant device for online gaming in China, but mobile games are now starting to close the gap.

In 2012, mobile devices accounted for just 5.4 percent of all gaming in China. Last year, they accounted for 36.6 percent, according to digital games data analysis firm DataEye.

One of the most significan­t trends in the mobile gaming space last year was the entry of China’s top online PC gaming companies, according to a report in April by Forbes.

The report said the top seven companies, which includes NetEase Tencent and Giant, released over 150 mobile games last year. Of these Tencent and NetEase accounted for the top 10 titles.

“This was a big move for China’s top online PC gaming companies: While Tencent has previously showed interest in mobile gaming, the rest of China’s gaming giants had largely steered clear of the mobile space, staying focused on the bigger portion of games revenue, PC online games,” Forbes said.

“The top seven’s expansion into mobile gaming serves as powerful validation that mobile gaming is a space worthy of their efforts, and it will be interestin­g to watch how the big players shape their mobile gaming presence moving forward,” it added.

Jelle Kooistra, head of product developmen­t at Newzoo Mobile, a division of research firm Newzoo, said the rapid increase in internet and smartphone penetratio­n is one of the main reasons for the growth of mobile games.

“In China, core PC gamers are shifting part of their game spending from PC to mobile, pushing up mobile revenues in China, and subsequent­ly, all of Asia.”

Kooistra said within the next few years most of the growth in mobile games in Asia, expected to be worth around $9 billion, will come from China.

“This growth is (already) driven by the increasing smartphone and mobile internet penetratio­ns, as well as growing economies and wealth.”

According to a research report by Newzoo and its strategic alliance partner TalkingDat­a, there were more than 16,500 mobile games across the many Chinese app stores last year, with more than 50 percent falling into the casual and card genres.

This was reflected by the genres that saw the most new launches last year, with role-playing games and strategy games representi­ng half of the total, while casual and card games represente­d only 30 percent.

“This surge in role-playing games and strategy games on mobile is exemplifie­d by NetEase’s Fantasy Westward Journey, a longstandi­ng PC game that was launched on mobile devices last year in response to the audience migrating between platforms,” according to the Newzoo and TalkingDat­a report.

With China comfortabl­y emerging as one of the biggest mobile markets in the world, Chinese mobile device makers are also increasing­ly fighting one another overseas.

Newzoo’s Global Mobile Device Intelligen­ce service, which tracks close to 2 billion monthly active iOS and Android devices across the world, shows different device manufactur­ers are winning wars on different fronts.

While Xiaomi is in a fierce battle with Huawei for local dominance in China, the company’s recent disappoint­ing financial performanc­e is reflected in its underwhelm­ing overseas success, where Huawei currently rules the roost, according to Newzoo’s data.

Though it has not found a way to the No 1 slot in foreign markets yet, One Plus, a smartphone maker based in Shenzhen in South China’s Guangdong province, is quietly performing well abroad. This puts it on course to become the breakout brand from the country’s device scene.

Although Chinese handset manufactur­ers are doing well in China, “it is important to point out that Apple is clearly the top device brand (in the country)”, according to a Global Mobile Device Intelligen­ce report published this month.

“Examining the number of devices actually used in a single month, rather than new units shipped, it emerges that Apple has the largest market share in China,” the Newzoo report added.

“As local brands are able to provide an increasing­ly high standard of quality and polish, maintainin­g this dominant position in the long term is anything but guaranteed.”

Focusing on Chinese brands, though, Huawei and Xiaomi are in close competitio­n, with mobile device market shares of 10.5 percent and 10.4 percent respective­ly in China.

The other major local brand in the top five is Oppo, in fifth place with a 7 percent market share.

“Away from home, Chinese device manufactur­ers have smaller market shares,” Newzoo said.

 ?? AFP ?? A man uses a HTC virtual reality mask to play a game at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing.
AFP A man uses a HTC virtual reality mask to play a game at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing.

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