IMGD 1001: The Game Industry

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Transcription:

IMGD 1001: The Game Industry Robert W. Lindeman Associate Professor Department of Computer Science Worcester Polytechnic Institute gogo@wpi.edu

Hit-Driven Entertainment Games are emotional, escapist, fantasyfulfilling, stimulating entertainment Causes of success or failure are often intangible (but quality matters a lot) Consumers are smart Hits come from individuals with skill, instinct, creativity, and experience, not from marketing 2

Big Business! Estimated $50B/year About the same as movie industry Music industry: $65B (2009) Pet food: $45B (2009) Estimated $65B by 2013 3

How the game industry works: 4

Roles Developers Publishers Platform Holders Distributors Retailers Middleware/Service Providers Press and Academia 5

Developers The people who actually build games Content design, creation, assembly Game design, story, dialog, engineering, music, SFX, docs Size varies (one person to hundreds) Some are part of a publisher or platform holder Some are independent Examples? 6

Publishers The people who bring games to market Supervise marketing, manufacturing, distribution, public relations (PR), support May also handle project management, quality assurance (QA) and licensing Usually assume most of the risk and reap most of the rewards Many specialize in particular market segments (sports, MMORPGs, etc) Examples? 7

Publisher Relationship with Developers Star developers can bully publishers, because publishers desperate for good content Most developers are bullied by publishers, because developers are desperate for money Publishing swings from big to small and back depending on the market Most also have in-house developers 8

Platform Holders The people who make and sell gaming hardware (Examples?) Most are also publishers, developers and digital distributors Sell platform licenses and replication services to publishers Stringent certification, final approval Sell required hardware, software and support to developers 9

Distributors The people who move boxes and bits Middlemen between publishers and retailers Compete on price, speed, availability Low margins (around 3%) Digital distribution is changing everything 10

Retailers The people who sell boxes Also sell shelf space and advertising to publishers Earn 30% margin Mass market: Walmart, Target, Toys- R-Us, Best Buy Specialty stores/chains: GameStop Digital distribution: 30% and growing 11

Service Providers Sound, Music, Voiceover Artists (2D, 3D, concept) QA PR Advertising 12

Middleware Providers The people who make and sell development tools Game engines, asset creation, source control, project management Difficult business Few customers, large upfront cost Profitable if you can break in 13

Service Providers The people who help publishers and developers Art: Concept, 2D/3D assets, packaging Audio: Sound FX, music, dialog QA: Playtesting, platform certification Public relations, advertising, career placement, vocational training Conference/award organizers, professional societies (IGDA) 14

Press and Academia The people who talk about games Paper/electronic magazines and books for players, industry Web sites (Gamasutra), blogs Colleges, universities, institutes Theory, research, career development Academic journals and conferences 15

What does it cost to make a game? $50-100K: Budget phone/casual $100-500K: Indy, nice phone/casual, budget DS, ultra-budget Wii, many PC games $500K-1M: Budget console, better DS/PC $1-5M: A titles (Titan Quest) $5-100M: AAA titles $100M+: Out-of-control AAA Star Wars: The Old Republic = $300M+ 16

World of Warcraft $50 Million to make 6 Million players @ average of about $12 / month for 2-3 months = $200 million a year (Less the cost of running those servers) 17

Development Models: Developer Driven Developer creates concept, builds demo Developer pitches concept/demo to publisher Publisher agrees to fund it Developer gets advance $$$ against royalties based on net receipts Developer uses advance to build game Publisher boxes, ships, markets, collects $$$ Developer MIGHT get more $$$ if advance is earned out 18

Gross and Net Receipts Gross receipts The amount of money a publisher is paid from the sale of a game Net receipts The amount of money a publisher actually earns from the sale of a game after deducting various expenses Developer royalties are based on net But what is the net? Better find out! 19

Development Models: Publisher Driven Publisher originates concept (usually a license) Selects and hires developer(s) Developer earns milestone-based fixed fee and/or advance against royalties (based on net receipts, of course!) Developer builds game Publisher boxes, ships, markets, collects $$$ Developer might get more $$$ if royalties are part of deal and advance is earned out 20

Development Models: Independent Developer originates concept Builds game with self-funding, somehow Developer persuades Web-based publisher (s) to carry the game Publisher operates Web store Developer gets 30-40% of each sale Popular games may get picked up by a retail publisher and sold in boxes Some developers self-publish, keep 100% 21

Games are a Tough Business Less than 10% of published titles break even Development and marketing costs are rising Licenses and sequels lower risk Self-publishing is very risky You pay a fun tax to work in games 22

Exercise: Getting to Market 2 minutes to write a one-sentence game description of a game you want to make Form up into pairs or teams 2 minutes to decide on ONE of your ideas 23

Exercise: Allocate Points You have 14 points Allocate 0-6 points for each of the following facets: P: Prototype/Pitch How much effort you place on developing a solid prototype to pitch to publishers D: Development How much effort you place on development M: Marketing/Sales How much effort you place on marketing your project F: Fun How effective your design is in terms of how much consumers like your product 24

Exercise: Roll the Dice! Everyone stand up For each roll of the die, please sit down if the number is greater than the points you allocated for that facet P: Prototype/Pitch D: Development M: Marketing/Sales F: Fun 25

Exercise: How Many are Left? Yes, luck is a factor You can control it some with skill and money But there s never enough of either to make it a sure thing 26