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22nd Apr 2002 UK COMPUTER GAMES SOFTWARE EXPLOSION CONTINUES
Predictions of a continued upward trend in the popularity of
leisure software, highlighted at the beginning of the year by The
European Leisure Software Publishers Association (ELSPA), are still
on track. New figures published today by ELSPA, sourced from Chart
Track, show a continuing increase in sales of computer games in the
UK with 11 million units of software sold in the first quarter of
2002. This is a 6 per cent rise on the same period last year. The
value of games sold, across all formats, rose by 20% from £219
million in the first quarter of 2001 to £262 million in the first
quarter of this year.
According to ELSPA, the market is being fuelled by three key factors:
the new breed of consoles, launches of hugely popular “blockbuster”
games and the ever widening appeal of video games and leisure
software to a more diverse audience. In the first quarter of this
year, the market was boosted by the launch of Microsoft’s Xbox,
software sales for which are already valued at close to £9 million –
and it was only launched in the UK on 14 March. Sales of PS2
software reached £105 million this quarter, three and a half times
what they were in the first quarter of 2001. Gameboy Advance has
sold 2.2 million units of software since the second quarter of 2001.
PC software sales are also on the increase with unit sales up 7%
from 3.9 million in quarter one 2001 to 4.2 million in 2002.
The fastest selling game launched in this period was the long
awaited sequel from Konami, Metal Gear Solid 2, which took only
three weeks, after its launch on 9 March, to achieve an ELSPA Gold
Sales Award for sales of over 200,000 units. Max Payne, published by
Take 2, which launched in early January, achieved ELSPA’s Silver
Sales Award of 100,000 units, in just six weeks. Grand Theft Auto,
published by Take 2, achieved ELSPA’s Platinum Award for 300,000
units just before Christmas and continued to sell strongly
throughout the first quarter, remaining in the top five in the all
format charts. Other games that achieved ELSPA’s Gold Sales Awards
during the first quarter of the year include Worms Armageddon by
Team 17/Infogrames; 007: Agent Under Fire by EA Games; WWF Smackdown!
Just Bring It by THQ; London Racer by Davilex; Bugs Bunny Crazy
Castle 4 by Kemco. Pokemon Gold by Nintendo achieved ELSPA’s
Platinum sales award for selling over 300,000 copies.
Roger Bennett, Director General of ELSPA, commented:
“The UK continues to excel in the leisure software industry,
demonstrating the innovative nature of the nation’s developers and
publishers. We are also witnessing a change in consumer perceptions
of playing computer games. The age range of gamers continues to
stretch - 56% of gamers are in the 25 to 44 year old bracket and
there are now increasing numbers of female gamers. One of the main
reasons the industry has been able to attract different people to
gaming is the wide diversity of leisure software available. From
traditional driving and action games to dancing games, quizzes,
educational software for young children and hobby software for their
parents and even grandparents.”
The UK is the third largest market for leisure software in the world
and a recent report (Mediaphile 2010) by media analysts, Screen
Digest, confirms that playing computer games is actually one of the
cheapest forms of entertainment, costing only 60 pence per hour.
This is less than using a mobile phone, going to the cinema, reading
newspapers or books or magazines, and less than listening to music.
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