Los Angeles Times

Video game sales decline 8% in 2011

- Alex Pham alex.pham@latimes.com

Besieged by increased competitio­n for entertainm­ent dollars and a sour economy, the video game industry saw sales drop 8% last year despite a deluge of highly anticipate­d titles that launched during the crucial holiday season.

Shoppers spent just over $17 billion on video games and consoles in 2011, down from $18.6 billion in 2010, according to a report released Thursday by NPD Group Inc., a market research firm.

Roughly $8.8 billion of that, or about 52% of total spending last year, went to buying games, down from $9.4 billion in 2010. The balance, $8.2 billion, was for console hardware and peripheral devices, such as extra game controller­s. That figure fell from $9.2 billion in 2010.

December, typically the industry’s best shot at ringing up big sales, clocked even steeper declines. Combined sales of consoles and games fell 21% to $4 billion last month, compared with $5.1 billion a year earlier.

“Lots of people rushed in to stores on Black Friday to buy games, but they disappeare­d in the first three weeks of December,” said Michael Pachter, an analyst with Wedbush Securities. “The stores were empty. They only came back during the week just before Christmas. Consoles in particular are way down. It’s weird, but people don’t seem to see them as gifts anymore.”

Sales of consoles such as the Wii, 3DS, Playstatio­n 3 and Xbox 360 tumbled 28% on a dollar basis in December, according to NPD. Sales also were down on a unit basis despite major price cuts on several consoles, Pachter said.

Consumers bought just 6.3 million consoles last month, down from 8.4 million a year ago, Pachter noted.

“That’s the lowest level since 2005,” he said.

Some of those dollars have migrated to online, social and mobile games, as well as games that are digitally downloaded, which were not included in the NPD report.

When spending for those games are included, industry revenue looks much more stable, down just 2% last year compared with 2010, said Anita Frazier, NPD’S game analyst.

The year was not uniformly bad for all publishers. Ubisoft Entertainm­ent landed three of the top 10 games sold in 2011, including two versions of its Just Dance franchise. Electronic Arts Inc.’s Battlefiel­d 3 and Madden NFL12 took two slots in the top 10 list. And Activision Blizzard Inc.’s Call of Duty military shooter franchise took the No. 1 and 6 spots.

“It was a tough year for the industry,” said Tony Key, Ubisoft’s senior vice president of marketing and sales. “But if you innovate and you bring something fun, you can still win.”

 ?? Dario Cantatore
Getty Images ?? STORM TROOPERS pose during the launch of the video game “Star Wars: The Old Republic” last month at Best Buy Union Square in New York City.
Dario Cantatore Getty Images STORM TROOPERS pose during the launch of the video game “Star Wars: The Old Republic” last month at Best Buy Union Square in New York City.

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