GamingNews

App Annie: Mobile games could grow 20% to $120 billion in 2021

Mobile game spending could grow 20% to $120 billion in 2021, according to a report by mobile data and analytics provider App Annie. The firm also said that overall mobile app spending hit $143 billion in 2020.

The San Francisco company’s State of Mobile 2021 report showed that the pandemic accelerated mobile adoption as consumers used their mobile devices to connect, work, learn, play and escape despite COVID-19 restricting their way of life.

“Mobile adoption has really advanced two to three years during 2020, and a lot of it is a result of the pandemic,” market insights director Amir Ghodrati said in an interview with GamesBeat.

Mobile wins

The top markets driving this spending included China, the United States, Japan, South Korea, and the United Kingdom. In 2020, ad spending grew to $240 billion, up 26% from 2019.

And funding remained strong: Investors poured $73 billion into mobile companies, an amount that doubled compared to the previous five years, according to Crunchbase.

Time spent on mobile surged to an average of 4.2 hours per day on Android, which amounted to 3.5 trillion hours, up 20% and 25%, respectively, from 2019. That mobile time spent surpassed the average 3.7 hours of live TV watched per day, Ghodrati said.

It’s not just young people spending all their time on mobile. The time spent in apps crossed generations. In the U.S., Gen Z, millennials, and Gen X/Baby Boomers spent 16%, 18%, and 30% more time per user in 2020 compared to a year earlier in their most-used apps.

Altogether, app downloads hit 218 billion, up 7%.

The power of gaming

Above: People played games on mobile devices even when at home.

Image Credit: App Annie

“We’re expecting mobile gaming to surpass $120 billion in consumer spending 2021, and that’s still on track,” Ghodrati said. “It’s still bigger than all these other forms of gaming combined, including the console, PC, Mac, and handheld. That is still very true even with the launch of new consoles.”

“Developers have changed how they’re developing their apps to account for this new usage,” Ghodrati said. “People have also realized that they should be spending money where they are spending time, which is increasingly on mobile.”

Mobile gaming is more than 50% bigger than all of the other gaming categories combined, App Annie said.

Casual games account for 78% of game downloads, followed by 20% by core gamers and 2% by casino gamers. But core gamers generated 66% of consumer spending in global mobile games, compared to 23% by casual gamers and 11% by casino gamers. Core games accounted for spent 55% of the time spent on games, compared to 43% for casual and 2% for casino games.

Sandbox, arcade, card, board, and casual games gained market share during the year. Other arcade games grew 300% during the year. Events, leaderboards, and customization were the top gameplay features in Western markets in 2020. In Asia, however, competitive multiplayer, chat, daily logins, guilds, and clans were the top features in generating user spending.

The breakout games included Among Us, My Talking Tom Friends, and Brain Test: Tricky Puzzles.

Games held up even when people in some countries started to go back to work or socialize in physical locations again.

“Not every part of every industry is remaining at the unsustainable peak during the March time frame when everyone just started downloading everything,” Ghodrati said. “But gaming is remaining strong, and games like Among Us are still performing quite well. People are still trying out new different types of things. And they’re playing heavier games a little bit more than they were before.”

But the habit of playing games has stuck around for those people who picked it up, Ghodrati said. Pokémon Go faced challenges at first but grew once Niantic adapted the game so it was easier to play remotely. Roblox also grew significantly during the year. Generally speaking, it takes 66 days for people to pick up new habits, and during the pandemic, people have had much more time than that, he said.

“More people will continue to play games moving forward, and we should see a bump from that in 2021,” Ghodrati said. “Mobile is just more convenient. Whenever there’s an opportunity to use a mobile device, people will do it more.”

December was a strong month for games, as it usually is, Ghodrati said.

Non-game apps

Above: 2020 rankings by market.

Image Credit: App Annie

Social networking apps also took center stage. Time spent per user increased by up to 325% annually. TikTok is on track to hit 1.2 billion monthly active users in 2021 as consumers look to stay connected as well as entertained.

App Annie said strategic celebrity-mobile app collaborations spurred downloads by 2.7 times. The most successful one was Travis Scott’s concert in Fortnite.

In India, time spent in business apps approach 3 billion hours on Android phones in Q3 alone.

Medical app downloads grew 50% in 2020 from a year ago — spurred by demand for COVID-19 tracing and telehealth apps. Downloads surpassed 3.2 billion across health and fitness and medical apps.

As people worried about money, they focused more on finance apps. The stock market boom was fueled in part by mobile usage, as participation in the stock market on mobile grew 55% during the year. Users also adopted shopping apps because they couldn’t go to the malls anymore.

The streaming platforms did well. There were 40% more hours of video streaming on mobile in 2020, as people binged on services like Netflix and Disney+ to distract themselves from the pandemic. By 2021, the average mobile streamer in the U.S. is expected to download 85% more video streaming apps compared to before the pandemic. YouTube saw time spent per user rise 6 times more than the next-closest app, capping at 38 hours of streaming per month on average.

“We’re finally seeing that spend catch up to where people have been spending their time,” Ghodrati said. “That comes to food delivery and finance apps and games.”

The app economy

Above: The top apps and games.

Image Credit: App Annie

Publishers are benefiting from this shift. About 25% more publishers earned more than $2 million per year on either Google Play or iOS. Still, 97% of publishers who monetize through iOS earned less than $1 million and so they would benefit from Apple’s recently announced small business program, which reduces fees for such developers from 30% of revenues to 15%.

After 10 weeks, iOS 14 operating system adoption is growing at a 24% faster rate than iOS 13. Close to 75% of users have upgraded to iOS 14. This means that advertisers should prepare for the implications of Apple’s change to the Identifier for Advertisers (IDFA), which hobbles targeted advertising in the name of increased user privacy.

“If people are updating fast, then IDFA changes will come faster and you need to be on top of that very quickly as a developer,” Ghodrati said. “You’ll have to focus on aggregated data and understanding what is going on without having access to the same type of information you may have had before.”

Will 2021 numbers fall short of 2020’s pandemic-driven growth? Ghodrati doesn’t think that will happen, and he believes game companies should focus on making games based on the new normal.

“This is like crossing the Rubicon,” Ghodrati said. “There are a lot of reasons that it won’t slip back. There are lots of reasons for publishers to go after the engaged audience. It’s going to be continued growth for quite a while.”


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Author: Dean Takahashi
Source: Venturebeat

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