MCV582 Friday 9th April 2010

Page 1

01 MCV582_final

7/4/10

13:18

Page 1

THE MARKET FOR COMPUTER AND VIDEO GAMES International Media Partner

Issue 582 Friday April 9 2010 £3.25

04 The Doctor is in

10 Reeves’ new plan

Key industry talent signed up to make free episodic Doctor Who game

New Capcom Europe COO outlines his plans for the Resident Evil publisher

05 Codemasters goes digital

14 Going 3D

CEO Rod Cousens reveals the firm’s ambitious plans for the digital space

We take a closer look at the latest visual trend sweeping the games industry

06 World Cup fever

23 Retail Biz

EA talks up its World Cup tie-in – which could be this summer’s biggest game

Our detailed product guides focus on Red Dead Redemption and more

EVERY BUYER G EVERY BRANCH G EVERY INDIE G EVERY WEEK

INCORPORATING

Food for thought in Q1 SPECIAL REPORT: Retail disappointed by lack of market growth, but industry still made £300m in just 13 weeks G 14m games sold during first three months of 2010 G Expectations high for Q4’s hardware rush by Christopher Dring The Easter sales spike last week (see graph below) couldn’t prevent Q1 2010 from failing to match 2009, with fewer consumers shopping on the High Street

IT WAS meant to be the Q1 that would save us from the slump, but a wash of quality releases have not been able to halt a games market decline. MCV research based on GfK Chart-Track data shows that the UK games market was worth £303m for the 13 weeks ending April 4th, 2010. That is a fall of 7.8 per cent when compared with the £329m earned during the comparable period last year. In terms of units, the number of games sold was down from 15.38m in 2009 to 13.79m in 2010 – a drop of 10.8 per cent. The results are disappointing for retailers, who were expecting a sales surge this Q1, driven by a blockbuster line-up on games. A number of factors – including poor weather, weak demand for Wii, and a fall in consumer spending – have knocked the market. “It’s frustrating when you consider the quality of product that’s out there,” said HMV’s head of games Tim Ellis. “It shows the impact of the economic downturn. People are making fewer impulse purchases, whilst the market is also having to compete with other popular culture categories such as technology devices, licensed products and artist merchandising. “Even things like gigs and festivals – if people are spending twice as much on this than they did five years

Halo Wars, Killzone 2

Street Fighter IV

F.E.A.R. 2

Resident Evil 5

Bayonetta, Darksiders Mass Effect 2

BioShock 2

Aliens vs Predator

Army of Two: 40th Day Sonic & Sega AllStars Racing, Heavy Rain

Just Cause 2, Battlefield: Bad Pokémon Heartgold Company 2 & SoulSilver Final Fantasy XIII

NOTE: In order to accurately represent like-for-like weeks, we have compared weeks 1-13 of 2010 with weeks 2-14 of 2009. This is due to there being 53 sales weeks last year

My belief is this year will continue to be tough. The consumer is worried about tax and the economy. Jon Biggs, Morrisons

ago then this represents disposal income that’s heading in a different direction.

Mass Effect 2, BioShock 2, Aliens vs Predator, Battlefield: Bad Company 2, Final Fantasy

XIII, Just Cause 2 and Pokémon have all hit shelves since January – there was even a new hardware launch in the form of Nintendo’s DSi XL. That line-up outnumbers 2009’s Q1 release slate – which included the likes of Killzone 2 and Resident Evil 5 – but just hasn’t been enough to buck a downward trend.

Morrisons games buyer Jon Biggs added: “My belief is this year will continue to be tough across the market. Firstly we had the January and February consumer credit card spending hangover from Christmas, then we have the uncertainty of the economy added to questions over the future government and how that will effect the individual in terms of taxation. The consumer is worried.” The UK trade is now looking towards Q4 to halt the decline. Three new hardware launches are expected this Christmas – PlayStation Move, Project Natal and Nintendo’s 3DS. And that’s on top of a hopefully promising software line-up that includes Halo: Reach, Fable III and Gran Turismo 5. “There is already a lot of anticipation around Natal and Move and along with 3DS these products will help to broaden gaming to an even wider audience this Christmas,” commented DSGi category manager for games, Peter Willis. The Hut’s Sarah Jasper added: “We look forward to the mass market frenzy we expect to be generated by the new hardwares across all formats, and have already started planning for Christmas.” Meanwhile, Grainger Games is banking on the arrival of Natal and Move generating as much excitement as new console launches: “There is definitely a positive buzz at Grainger about Q4. We expect Natal and Move to encourage an uplift in console sales,” said sales director Phil Moore.

PERSONNEL 20 RETAIL BIZ 21 NEW RELEASES 27 HIGH STREET 28 CHARTS 30


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.