GamingNews

‘The Witcher 3’ is now more popular on Steam than it was at launch

You’d think that a single player game over four years old would be long past its prime, but don’t tell that to CD Projekt Red. The studio’s community lead Marcin Momot has revealed that the PC version of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt broke its record for the most number of concurrent players, with nearly 94,000 people playing on December 29th. Polygon noted that the number has climbed higher since, and that the game was eighth in Steam’s top ten games by player count (a position that holds true as we write this). For context, Witcher 3 set its previous record all the way back at launch in May 2015, when 92,268 people fired up the action role-playing title.

It won’t surprise you to hear what likely prompted the spike. You see, there’s this little Netflix series called The Witcher that premiered on December 20th — there’s a good chance that seeing Henry Cavill and crew in the show prompted players to fire up the game. And when Witcher 3 is currently on sale for $15, there are few obstacles for newcomers who want more of Geralt, Yennefer and Ciri than Netflix (and in some cases, the books) can provide.

We wouldn’t expect resurgences like this to happen very often. The Witcher spike is the result of a popular show feeding into a popular but semi-recent game. However much you liked the Castlevania series, it wasn’t about to revive sales of a vampire-slaying game franchise past its prime. Nonetheless, this appears to be proof that streaming shows can fuel demand well beyond TV screens.


Author: Jon Fingas
Source: Engadget

Related posts
DefenseNews

Raytheon to develop two Standard Missile types with better targeting

DefenseNews

Boeing’s defense unit shows profit, despite $222M loss on KC-46, T-7

DefenseNews

Here are the two companies creating drone wingmen for the US Air Force

Cleantech & EV'sNews

CATL unveils world's first LFP battery with 4C ultra-fast charging for 370-mi in 10 mins

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!

Worth reading...
Google Health’s AI identifies breast cancer in mammogram imagery with fewer false positives