White Paper: Computer and Video Games
White Paper: Computer and Video Games
White Paper: Computer and Video Games
August 2003
Introduction 4
History
Overview 5
1980 – 1985 6
1986 – 1995 7
2000 – present 8
Conclusion 18
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COMPUTER AND VIDEO GAMES:
A BRITISH PHENOMENON AROUND THE WORLD
Introduction
Throughout the era of youth culture, some time after World War 2, the UK
has punched well above its weight. From pop music to fashion to mobile
telephony, we’re out there, leading from the front.
And the British influence is nowhere more evident than in the video games
industry. We buy more games than any other country in Europe. We make
and sell more games than any other country in Europe. And, when it comes
to games development, our technical nous and imaginative flair brings
publishers from all over the world to our shores.
Video gaming is now one of the fastest growing pastimes in the world. Over
20 years ago, UK developers and publishers played a pivotal role in creating
it. Now, the combination of creative energy and technical excellence, which
is the hallmark of British games creators, has ensured they remain among the
best in the world.
Every year “Britsoft” earns millions for the UK and delights gamers all over
the world. Yet, British games companies rarely enjoy the publicity and
prestige afforded to their counterparts in film, TV and music.
The aim here is to provide some detail to go with these bold claims. We hope
to prove the games industry is as important to UK Plc – if not more – as the
traditional creative industries such as film, TV and music.
The UK games market is larger than the market for video rental
or cinema.
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History – overview
The games industry is barely 30 years old. It started in the US in 1972 and
gained real momentum towards the end of that decade in Japan. But by the
early eighties the UK had begun to make its own impression.
Pong
Typically, the British went their own way. While the US and Japan focused on
‘console’ hardware (dedicated games machines – the predecessors of today’s
PlayStation and Xbox), UK developers were drawn to home computers (the
predecessors of PCs), playing and creating games on machines with key-
boards and memory.
Many of the UK’s most respected games developers – now running large
internationally-renowned studios – created their first games on these
machines.
With the advent of Sega and Nintendo in the early nineties, video gaming
exploded beyond the hobbyist sector. But it was when Sony entered the fray
with its PlayStation in 1995 that the mass market was truly embraced.
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1980 – 1985
Although gaming really took off in the late seventies (via the arcades and
domestic machines like the Atari 2600), it wasn’t until 1980 that British
gaming really began to tread its own unique course. This was the year that
Clive Sinclair created the ZX80. By today’s standards it was embarrassingly
basic. But it cost just £100 and was programmable.
The ZX81
If the ZX80 lit a fuse, the ZX81 – released a year later – started a fire. More
advanced than its predecessor but selling for as little as £49.95, it put
programming within the grasp of the UK’s growing army of gamers. For those
who knew how, it was often easier to create games than run and load them.
In 1982 Clive Sinclair launched the colour Sinclair Spectrum machine. It would
become the most successful of all the home computers during this period.
Many of today’s leading developers owe their careers and fortunes to the
Spectrum and other pioneering machines.
They include Richard and David Darling (who own major British games
publisher Codemasters), David Perry (founder of US based Shiny
Entertainment) and Chris and Tim Stamper (owners of Rare, the most
successful of all UK development companies).
Since being founded in 1985 UK studio Rare has sold more than
90 million games all over the world.
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The growth of the games market in the UK prompted the creation of many
influential publishing companies at this time. Typically, these organisations
would sell, market and distribute games. But in time they would finance
them too.
As the market grew, some began to import overseas titles and even do licens-
ing deals with the owners of valuable intellectual properties. The foremost
games publishers of the eighties were: US Gold, Ocean, Codemasters,
Mindscape, Gremlin, Psygnosis, Domark, Virgin. Virtually none of these com-
panies exist today in the same form. However, many did form the basis of
today’s multi-national publishers.
1986 – 1995
The nineties was the decade that saw the games industry change from a cot-
tage industry to one with global aspirations.
The situation began to change in the late eighties when 8-bit consoles
(Nintendo NES, Sega Master System) leapt to prominence. By the nineties 16
bit consoles (Nintendo SNES and Sega Mega Drive) and the PC CD-ROM took
the market into the mainstream.
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By the time 32-bit consoles were established (such as the PlayStation in 1995)
the UK publisher base had consolidated. Many became the basis for
larger, often foreign-owned companies. For example Ocean and
Gremlin were bought by Infogrames (now Atari) while Psygnosis
became the development heart of Sony’s European games cen-
tre. US Gold and Domark were the starting point for what is
now the UK’s largest publisher Eidos. Meanwhile Codemasters,
Empire and SCi held on to their independence and are still active today.
2000 – present
In the new millennium, the industry has continued its growth and, by
necessity, consolidation has continued. Today’s leading publishers operate in
markets all over the world. They spend millions on R&D and investing in the
film, TV and sports licences needed to attract the consumer’s attention.
The need for deep pockets and global distribution has concentrated power
in the hands of a small number of very large games publishers.
A British made game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City was the best
selling game in the UK and in the US in 2002.
The most dominant trend in UK games development since 2000 has been the
emergence of the “super-developer”. These large companies employ hun-
dreds of staff and generally divide their activities between
creating their own games, creating games commissioned by publishers and
doing ‘ports’ (converting a finished game for a different hardware platform).
The massive scale of games development (up to £10 million in budget and taking
many years to complete) has prompted many studios to seek independent means
of finance. It’s simply unrealistic for them to rely entirely on publishers to fund their
creative ideas. Instead, large companies such as Argonaut have floated on AIM and
others such as Kuju, Elixir and Evolution have secured significant VC backing.
Finally, the present decade has seen the UK development sector diversify into
exciting new platforms for gaming. British companies are now fore-
most in the development of games for
mobile phones, digital TV and the
Internet.
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Current UK market data1
The UK is the largest market for games in Europe and the third largest
market in the world, after the US and Japan. Total UK leisure software sales
in 2002 were £1,081m, the highest value ever reached. The world market for
games and edutainment/reference software was $16.9 billion in 2002.
Since 1995, more than 215 million units of leisure software have been sold in the
UK. That is enough for every household in Britain to own almost nine titles each.
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UK games compared with other industries 2002
UK € 1,719m
Germany € 1,196m
France € 990m
Italy € 438m
Spain/Portugal € 415m
Eidos’ Tomb Raider series has sold more than 28 million units
worldwide.
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The complexion of the UK Games Industry
Publishers
Publishers are the organisations that sell, market and distribute games. They
acquire games either by licensing them from other publishers, developing
them in-house or buying them from development studios (either complete
or as commissioned ideas).
During the eighties, the UK was home to around over a dozen sizeable
games publishers. However, as the industry grew these organisations were
merged and bought to the extent that, today, there are just four left. This is
a pattern that has repeated across the world.
Eidos
Of course, it’s the latter franchise that has been Eidos’ flagwaver. The
first Tomb Raider game was launched in 1996. Since then Lara Croft
has sold more than 28 million units worldwide and been turned into
two Hollywood films. However, there is more to Eidos than Tomb Raider. In
2000 the company topped charts all over Europe with its adaptation of Who
Wants To Be A Millionaire? which also became the UK’s biggest selling game
that year.
Then there’s the three million selling Championship Manager series which gets
bigger and bigger every year. The most recent version Championship Manager
4 sold 125,000 in a single weekend when it was released in April of this year.
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Eidos recently announced operating profits on a turnover of £88 million for
the six months to 31st December 2002.
Codemasters
Empire Interactive
Empire was founded in 1987 and scored major hits with titles such as Gazza
Soccer and Pipemania before becoming a consistently successful PC publisher
for most of the nineties. In 2000 it joined the Alternative Investment Market of
the London Stock Exchange and used the funds to expand
into console publishing. It did so with major licences such
as Starsky & Hutch. Forthcoming titles include adaptations
of film properties Bad Boys 2 and Bulletproof Monk.
SCi Entertainment
SCi Entertainment has an unusual strategy in that virtually all its games
development is outsourced to third parties: it has proved successful. The
product that put SCi on the map was the controversial Carmageddon in
1997. Since then, the company has published a diverse
catalogue but has become known for driving-related games
such as The Italian Job, Gumball 3000 and Rally
Championship. It has also been a keen purchaser of high
profile licences. Examples include Thunderbirds, Futurama
and The Great Escape. SCi is a public listed company.
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Developers
UK developed games maintain a strong presence across all formats and all
territories. In 2003 they accounted for half the UK’s top 10 best sellers,
including two of the top three. And in the US two in the top five biggest hits
of 2002 and the first three months of 2003 originated in the UK.
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Best selling full price games in Q1 2003 – US3
The UK’s long history of games development has evolved to create a sector
that is populated by a broad cross section of studios. They vary in size from
the large ‘super developers’ with up to 200 staff to the breakaway groups
with less than 10.
They vary in ownership from the studio that is wholly owned by a publisher,
to the part-owned, to the entirely independent.
They also vary in their strategy. While some focus on huge, technology-led
PlayStation 2 games, others concentrate on the quick turnaround of games
for mobile phones or TV.
But those who have succeeded have grown into powerful companies capable
of assigning multiple teams to work on multiple projects simultaneously.
A selected list includes:
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Studio Selected Titles
Eurocom James Bond Nightfire, Buffy The Vampire Slayer
Evolution World Rally Championship series
Kaboom Group Lego Island, various Olympics titles
Kuju Microsoft Train Simulator
Rebellion Judge Dredd series, Rainbow Six
Revolution Broken Sword series,
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? (PS2)
Travellers Tales Crash Bandicoot, Toy Story, Bug’s Life
Vis Powerpuff Girls, Tom & Jerry, Earthworm Jim 3D
Warthog Tom & Jerry, Star Trek, Rally Championship, X-Men
The biggest publishers in the world all have bases in the UK. Many have their
own development teams working here too. They include:
Many UK studios are so highly prized they become targets for partial or
complete acquisition by publishers. The best example of such a studio in the
UK is Rare.
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Selected wholly-owned UK studios
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Mobile and TV developers
The relentless rise of costs and timescales for developing video games has
driven some developers to explore new platforms for gaming. Development
for digital TV and mobiles is relatively inexpensive and quick to turn around.
Moreover, many UK developers weaned on old home computer formats
possess all the necessary technical knowledge and creative instincts to lead
this market.
Studio Platform
Hailstorm Mobile
Iomo Mobile
Games Kitchen Mobile
Masabi Mobile
Argonaut/Morpheme Mobile
Digital Bridges Mobile
Ngame Mobile/TV
Denki Mobile/TV
Yoomedia TV
Two Way TV TV
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Conclusion
The games industry has moved away the margins to occupy a central position
in the leisure time of the British public. The most popular games sell hundreds
of thousands of copies and are often based on family-friendly licences such
as Harry Potter and Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?.
Meanwhile, the industry’s own creations – most famously Lara Croft – appear
on newspaper front pages and fizzy drink bottles.
It’s time for those who love games to shout out their devotion. And, for
those who are less acquainted with its pleasures, it’s time to acknowledge
that gaming is respectable, culturally important and economically essential.
Gaming is here to stay. And Britain is all the better for it.
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Sources:
1
Screen Digest/ELSPA report 2003
2
Chart-Track/ELSPA sales reports
3
NPD Group
Key Contacts:
Roger Bennett
Director General
ELSPA
167 Wardour Street
London W1F 8WL
t: 020 7534 0580
e: roger.bennett@elspa.com
Media Enquiries:
Deborah Coster
Barrington Harvey
Troopers Yard
Bancroft
Hitchin SG5 1JW
t: 01462 456780
e: debi.coster@bhpr.co.uk
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