Advertisement
Advertisement
Mobile gaming
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Characters from the Fortnite video game prepare to fight to the death. The game’s revenue growth has slowed. Photo: NZME

Is Fortnite finished? Slowing revenue growth suggests it could be game over

The video game’s popularity soared after the release of a free ‘battle royale’ version that lets up to 100 players fight to be last character standing, but revenue in July rose only 2 per cent

It is a question that millions of parents want answered: will the wildly popular online survival battle game Fortnite soon lose its grip on the attention of their school-age children?

Much of the video game industry is also wondering whether the Fortnite balloon has popped, or is simply leaking air, after the first disappointing revenue data since the game’s release last year. Experts say its publisher, Epic Games, needs to put these doubts to rest if it is to succeed in its expansion plans.

Could streaming make the major games consoles obsolete?

Fortnite’s popularity took off last year after the release of a free “battle royale” version that lets up to 100 players vie to be the last character standing on ever-shrinking terrain. Dropped onto the battlefield with nothing, players have to scrounge for weapons as the fight for survival begins.

Although the game is free, Epic Games had been successful in getting players to pay for goodies, which is its main revenue stream. As of July the game had brought in more than a US$1 billion in revenue. But that data also gave analysts cause for concern that the Fortnite juggernaut may have tripped: revenue edged only two per cent higher in July from the previous month.

It was a lacklustre response to the recently launched paid “battle pass” that offered players new equipment and outfits for avatars, raising questions about how much longer Epic Games can keep players spending money on what are essentially cosmetic changes to the game.

In Fortnite, players communicate and play with one another while trying to survive on the multi-terrain island they've been dropped on. Photo: Bloomberg

“Epic Games has made a lot of mistakes which could knock them from their peak. Players could get tired if the game doesn’t evolve and there is too much cosmetic [change],” said Frederic Gau, president of the Gozulting consulting firm. Epic Games has also bet on e-sports to reinforce the popularity of Fortnite, investing nearly US$100 million in such video game competitions.

“One hundred million dollars of cash prizes seems a lot, but prizes for each competition are not that large,” said Andrew Kitson, head of telecoms, media and technology industry research at Fitch Solutions.

Enabling the popularity of Fortnite is the fact it is available on different game consoles plus smartphones. For smartphones, it first launched on iPhone, then a few weeks later on Android, the operating system used on 85 per cent of smartphones and particularly dominant in Asia.

One hundred million dollars of cash prizes seems a lot but prizes for each competition are not that large
Andrew Kitson, Fitch Solutions

“Android can provoke two different effects,” said Laurent Michaud at IDATE Digiworld, a think tank and consultancy specialising in the internet, telecommunications and media sectors. “It can boost other platforms or create its own proper segment, because often is different players who play.”

China also offers enormous potential for growth, both in terms of smartphone players and e-sports. Chinese internet giant Tencent has pre-registered 10 million players.

“Smartphones represent now 50 per cent of global video game revenue and China represents half of that market,” said Michaud. “Today the Chinese play mostly on smartphones.”

Tencent, which is a big publisher of smartphone games as well as being behind the WeChat messenger service, holds 40 per cent of Epic Games. Having Tencent behind it is a major advantage for penetrating the Chinese market.

“A success in China will show whether Fortnite will continue growing as a game for the general public,” said Gau. “It could also help enormously in it developing in e-sports. It could either cause it to explode or steal its momentum elsewhere – it’s a bet.”

Analysts say Epic Games has yet to address its major fault – that Fortnite doesn’t have sufficient variety compared to its principal online rivals, in particular e-sport stars Dota2, Overwatch and League of Legends, which regularly reinvent themselves.

Kitson at Fitch Solutions said he thinks Fortnite is a one-dimensional game, as were some older games that were still able to build a player community.

Fans watch the Philadelphia Fusion and London Spitfire compete in the Overwatch League Grand Finals’ first night of competition at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Photo: AP

Fortnite is not a commercial failure but not a long-term shot,” he said. “But Epic Games can learn a lot from it to make a better one next time.”

Even if Epic Games rushes out a new version of Fortnite – the battle royale version was its second – Gau sees another problem: “For many it is a second game.”

Fortnite will bypass Google’s app store. That’s a bad sign for Android

He said analysts will be looking closely to see whether sales of the Fifa football and Call of Duty first-person shooter franchises hold up as well as in previous years, because “that wouldn’t be a good sign for Fortnite as players are returning to their favourite game”.

 

 

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: As revenue growth slows, could it soon be game over for Fortnite?
Post