Digital distribution of video games explained

In the video game industry, digital distribution is the process of delivering video game content as digital information, without the exchange or purchase of new physical media such as ROM cartridges, magnetic storage, optical discs and flash memory cards. This process has existed since the early 1980s, but it was only with network advancements in bandwidth capabilities in the early 2000s that digital distribution became more prominent as a method of selling games. Currently, the process is dominated by online distribution over broadband Internet.

To facilitate the sale of games, various video game publishers and console manufacturers have created their own platforms for digital distribution. These platforms provide centralized services to purchase and download digital content for either specific video game consoles or personal computers. Some platforms may also serve as digital rights management systems, limiting the use of purchased items to one account.

Digital distribution of video games is becoming increasingly common, with major publishers and retailers paying more attention to digital sales, including Steam, PlayStation Store, Amazon.com, GAME, GameStop, Xbox Live Marketplace, and others. It is particularly popular for PC games. According to a study conducted by SuperData Research, the volume of digital distribution of video games worldwide was $6.2 billion per month in February 2016,[1] and reached $7.7 billion per month in April 2017.[2]

History

1980s

Before Internet connections became widespread, there were few services for digital distribution of games, and physical media was the dominant method of delivering video games. One of the first examples of digital distribution in video games was GameLine, which operated during the early 1980s. The service allowed Atari 2600 owners to use a specialized cartridge to connect through a phone line to a central server and rent a video game for 5–10 days. The GameLine service was terminated during the video game crash of 1983. From 1987 to 2003, Nintendo's Japan-only Disk Writer kiosks allowed users to copy from a jukebox style of rotating stock of the latest games to their floppy disks. They can keep each one for an unlimited time, and play at home on the Famicom and Famicom Disk System for, then about and 1/6 of the price of many new games.[3] [4] [5] It was called "truly ground-breaking for its time and could be considered a forerunner of more modern distribution methods [such as] Xbox Live Arcade, PlayStation Network, and Steam".[6] There were also examples such as Soft bender TAKERU for PCs, which also served as a distribution system for karaoke.[7]

1990s

Only a few digital distribution services for consoles would appear in the 90s. Among them were Sega's Sega Meganet and Sega Channel, released in 1990 and 1994 respectively, providing Sega Genesis owners with access to games on demand and other services. Nintendo released peripherals and services only in Japan: the Satellaview satellite subscription service for Super Famicom and the Nintendo Power flash cartridge in-store kiosk system for Super Famicom and Game Boy.

On PCs, digital distribution was more prevalent. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, prior to the widespread adoption of the Internet, it was common for software developers to upload demos and shareware to Bulletin Board Systems. In most cases, demos or shareware releases would contain an advertisement for the full game with ordering instructions for a physical copy of the full game or software. Some developers instead used a licensing system where 'full versions' could be unlocked from the downloaded software with the purchase of a key, thereby making this method the first true digital distribution method for PC Software. Notable examples include the Software Creations BBS and ExecPC BBS, both of which continue to exist today - albeit in a very different form. Bulletin Board systems however were not interconnected, and developers would have to upload their software to each site. Additionally, BBSs required users to place a telephone call with a modem to reach their system. For many users, this meant incurring long-distance charges. These factors contributed to a sharp decline in BBS usage in the early 1990s, coinciding with the rise of inexpensive Internet providers.

In the mid-1990s, with the rise of the Internet, early individual examples for digital distribution under usage of this new medium emerged, although there were no significant services for it. For instance, in 1997 the video game producer Cavedog regularly distributed additional content for the Real-time strategy computer game Total Annihilation as Internet downloads via their website.[8]

Also, users used the Internet to distribute their own content. Without access to the retail infrastructure that would allow them to distribute this content through physical media, user-created content such as game modifications, maps or fan patches could only be distributed online.

2000s

By this time, Internet connections were fast and numerous enough such that digital distribution of games and other related content became viable.

Consoles

The proliferation of Internet-enabled consoles allowed also additional buyable content that could be added onto full retail games, such as maps, in-game clothing, and gameplay. This type of content, called DLC (Downloadable content), become prevalent for consoles in the 2000s.

PC

An early innovator of the digital distribution idea on the PC was Stardock. In 2001 Stardock released the Stardock Central to digitally distribute and sell its own PC titles, followed by a service called Drengin.net with a yearly subscription pay model in summer 2003. In 2004, the subscription model was substituted by TotalGaming.net which allowed individual purchases or pay an upfront fee for tokens which allowed them to purchase games at a discount. In 2008, Stardock announced Impulse a third-generation digital distribution platform, which included independent third-party games and major publisher titles.[9] The platform was sold to GameStop in May 2011.[10] [11]

The period between 2004 and now saw the rise of many digital distribution services on PC, such as Amazon Digital Services, Impulse, GameTap, GameStop, Games for Windows – Live, Origin, Battle.net, Direct2Drive, GOG.com, GamersGate and several more. The offered properties and policies differ significantly between the digital distribution services: e.g. while most of the digital distributors don't allow reselling of bought games, Green Man Gaming allows this.[12]

In September 2003 Valve released the Steam platform for Windows computers (later expanded to Mac OS and Linux) as a means to distribute Valve-developed video games. Steam has the speciality that customers don't buy games but instead get the right to use games, which might be revoked when a violation of the End-user license agreement is seen by Valve[13] or when a customer doesn't accept changes in the End-user license agreement.[14] [15] Steam began later to sell the right to play games from independent developers and major distributors and has since become the largest PC digital distributor. By 2011, Steam has approximately 50-70% of the market for downloadable PC games, with a userbase of about 40 million accounts.[16] [17] [18]

In 2008, the website gog.com (formerly called Good Old Games) was started, specialized in the distribution of older, classical PC games. While all the other DD services allow various forms of DRM (or even have them embedded) gog.com has a strict non-DRM policy.[19] Desura was launched in 2010. The service was notable for having a strong support of the modding community and also has an open source client, called Desurium.[20] Origin, a new version of the Electronic Arts online store, was released in 2011 in order to compete with Steam and other digital distribution platforms on the PC.[21]

2010s

Mobile gaming

See also: Mobile game. Digital distribution is the dominant method of delivering content on mobile platforms such as iOS devices and Android phones. Lower barriers to entry has allowed more developers to create and distribute games on these platforms, with the mobile gaming industry growing considerably as a result.[22]

Console gaming

Today, each of the current main consoles (Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X/S, and PlayStation 5) has its own digital distribution platform to sell games exclusive to digital formats and digital versions of retail games. These are the Nintendo eShop, Xbox Games Store, and PlayStation Store, respectively, which all sell full retail games, along with other products, such as DLC.

Implications

The main advantages of digital distribution over the previously dominant retail distribution of video games include significantly reduced production, deployment, and storage costs. Games purchased digitally are legally licenses and not sold, meaning consumers do not have legal ownership and cannot resell their games.[23]

Compared to physically distributed games, digital games cannot be destroyed because they can be redownloaded from the distribution system. Services like Steam, Origin, and Xbox Live do not offer ways to sell used games once they are no longer desired. Steam offers a non-commercial family sharing options.[24] This is also somewhat countered by frequent sales offered by these digital distributors, often allowing major savings by selling at prices below what a retailer is able to offer.

Digital distribution also offers new structural possibilities for the whole video game industry, which, prior to the emergence of digital media as a relevant means of distribution, was usually built around the relationship of the video game developer, who produced the game, and the video game publisher, who financed and organized the distribution and sale. The heightened production costs in the early 2000s made many video game publishers avoid risks and led to the rejection of many smaller-scale game development projects.[25] Gabe Newell, co-founder of Valve, the developer and intellectual property rights owner of Steam, described the disadvantages of physical retail distribution for smaller game developers as such:

Since the 2000s, when digital distribution saw its first meaningful surge in popularity, an increasing number of niche market titles have been made available and become commercially successful, including (but not limited to) remakes of classic games.[26] [27] The new possibilities of digital distribution stimulated the creation of game titles from small video game producers like independent game developers[28] [29] and modders (e.g. Garry's Mod[30]), which before were not commercially feasible.

Indie game development

The increasing prevalence of digital distribution has allowed independent game developers to sell and distribute their games without having to negotiate deals with publishers. No longer required to rely on conventional physical retail sales, independent developers have seen success through the sale of games that normally would not be accepted by publishers for distribution.[28] The PC and mobile platforms are the most prominent in regards to independent game distribution, with services such as GOG.com, GamersGate, Steam and the iOS App Store providing ways to sell games with minimal to no distribution costs. Some digital distribution platforms exist specifically for indie game distribution, such as the Xbox Live Indie Games.

Business model

Nearly all digital distribution services today take a cut of the revenue of each sale to cover costs for running the storefront, the distribution of content, and other facets. According to a 2019 study by IGN based on published data and interviews with publishers and developers, this is nearly 30% for the personal computer storefronts, including Steam, GOG.com and Microsoft, for console services for Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One, for mobile app stores including App Store and Google Play, and even for major retailers like Best Buy, GameStop, and Amazon.com. The only exceptions to this are itch.io where the developer is free to set the rate, Humble Bundle which takes a 15% cut in addition to an additional 10% that the buyer can select to go to charity or to the developer, and the Epic Games Store (EGS) which has a 12% cut.[31] This 30% cut is consistent with past licensing for development on video game consoles since the Nintendo Entertainment System.[32]

Surveys from 2019 to 2021 found developers and publishers desired to see a reduction of industry-standard 30% take, since this would increase the amount of revenue they would see from each sale.[31] [33] Epic Games' Tim Sweeney, prior to launching the Epic Games Store, had estimated that the current costs for delivering game content to buyers required as low as an 8% cut on sales revenue, and launched the EGS with its 12% cut to demonstrate this.[34] Microsoft announced it would similarly reduce the Microsoft Store cut for Windows products from 30% to 12% by August 1, 2021.[35]

List of video game digital distribution systems

Console

Mobile

PC - Websites

DRM-free

PC - Clients:

ClientPublisherOpen to
third-party operators
Total titles
Amazon Games Amazon.com, Inc.= 40
Battle.net Activision-Blizzard, Inc.= 20
Beamdog IdeaSpark Labs, Inc.> 10
Epic Games Store Epic Games, Inc.< 1,400
Gog Galaxy CD Projekt S.A.> 7,000
Microsoft Store Microsoft Corporation< 240
EA app for Windows and Origin for Mac Electronic Arts, Inc.> 380
Riot Client Riot Games, Inc.= 5
Rockstar Games Rockstar Games, Inc.> 5
Steam Valve Corporation> 100,000
Ubisoft Connect Ubisoft Entertainment SA< 240
WeGame Tencent> 10,000

Obsolete

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: February 2016 Digital Sales Report: Industry Hits $6.2 Billion, Console Sales up 34%. March 24, 2016. PlayStation LifeStyle. August 14, 2020.
  2. Web site: SuperData: Digital gaming hit $7.7 billion in April. May 25, 2017. August 14, 2020.
  3. Web site: Mysterious curiosities of the Famicom Disk System . Brandon . Dalker . July 8, 2011 . Nsidr . July 29, 2019.
  4. Web site: Revisiting the Famicom Disk System: mass storage on console in 1986 . John . Linneman . Eurogamer . July 27, 2019 . July 29, 2019.
  5. Book: Sheff, David. Game Over: How Nintendo conquered the world. 1994. Vintage Books. 9780307800749. 1st Vintage books. New York. 780180879 . July 27, 2019.
  6. Web site: Slipped Disk - The History of the Famicom Disk System . November 20, 2010 . Damien . McFerran . NintendoLife . September 5, 2014.
  7. Nobushige . Kobayashi . Yuhsuke . Koyama . March 31, 2020 . The Early History of the Hobbyist Production Field of Video Games and its Impacts on the Establishment of Japan's Video Game Industries . Replaying Japan . 2 . Ritsumeikan University . 10.34382/00013364 . 2433-8060.
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20010330073657/http://www.cavedog.com/totala/dwnlds_frame.html TA downloadable units
  9. Web site: Stardock Impulse Details. Gamers With Jobs.
  10. Web site: GameStop Announces Acquisition of Spawn Labs and Agreement to Acquire Impulse, Inc. . GameStop. March 31, 2011 . May 2, 2011.
  11. Web site: GameStop indulges in some Impulse buying ... no seriously, it bought Impulse (and Spawn Labs). Christopher. Grant. Joystiq. AOL. March 31, 2011. May 2, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20150131154411/http://www.joystiq.com/2011/03/31/gamestop-indulges-in-some-impulse-buying-no-seriously-it-bo/. January 31, 2015. dead.
  12. Web site: Green Man Gaming Denies It Sells "Grey Market" Game Keys. August 14, 2020.
  13. Web site: Thought: Do We Own Our Steam Games? . John . Walker . February 1, 2012. July 1, 2013 . Rock, Paper, Shotgun.
  14. Web site: Verbraucherzentrale: Abmahnung für Valve und Steam . Annika . Demgen . de . . September 17, 2012 . September 22, 2012.
  15. Web site: Valve: Accept New Steam Subscriber Agreement Or Disable Your Account. August 5, 2012 . Justin . Alderman . March 22, 2014 . wegotthiscovered.com.
  16. Web site: The Master of Online Mayhem . . April 26, 2012 . February 28, 2011.
  17. Web site: 40 Million Active Gamers on Steam Mark . Gaming Bolt . January 7, 2012 . January 6, 2012.
  18. Web site: Stardock Reveals Impulse, Steam Market Share Estimates . Graft . Kris. . November 21, 2009 . November 19, 2009.
  19. Web site: First look: GOG revives classic PC games for download age . December 27, 2012 . Frank. Caron . September 9, 2008 . Ars Technica . [...] [Good Old Games] focuses on bringing old, time-tested games into the downloadable era with low prices and no DRM..
  20. Web site: Desura Game Client Is Now Open-Source . Michael . Larabel . January 21, 2012 . January 21, 2012 . .
  21. Web site: PDF E3 2011 Investor Presentation . April 26, 2012 . Electronic Arts.
  22. Web site: Rise of mobile gaming surprises big video-game developers. Canadian Business. May 1, 2012. March 13, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120317224221/http://www.canadianbusiness.com/article/75215--rise-of-mobile-gaming-surprises-big-video-game-developers. March 17, 2012. dead.
  23. Web site: Thomas . Bill . October 2, 2019 . PC game ownership in the digital age: what do you do in a post-ownership age? . May 10, 2022 . . en.
  24. Web site: May 13, 2015 . Steam family sharing . March 13, 2015 . steampowered.com.
  25. Web site: Videogame Publishers Place Big Bets on Big-Budget Games. MARCELO PRINCE, PETER ROTH. December 21, 2004. July 1, 2013. The Wall Street Journal Online. The jump in development and marketing costs has made the videogame industry "enormously risk-averse,[...]Publishers have largely focused on making sequels to successful titles or games based on a movie or comic book characters, which are seen as less risky. "We don't greenlight any more things that will be small or average size games.[...]".
  26. Web site: The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition Tech Info . . November 15, 2011.
  27. Web site: E3 2009: The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition Preview . June 2, 2009 . Charles . Onyett . . November 15, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120527144404/http://xboxlive.ign.com/articles/990/990254p1.html . May 27, 2012 .
  28. Web site: Download distribution opening new doors for independent game developers. Statesman.com. April 17, 2011. Garr. Brian. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110421074810/http://www.statesman.com/business/technology/download-distribution-opening-new-doors-for-independent-game-1409285.html. April 21, 2011.
  29. Web site: Stuart. Keith. Back to the bedroom: how indie gaming is reviving the Britsoft spirit. The Guardian. November 8, 2012. January 27, 2010.
  30. Web site: Garry's Mod has sold 1.4 million copies, Garry releases sales history to prove it . Tom. Senior. March 16, 2012. June 28, 2013 . PCGamer.
  31. Web site: Report: Steam's 30% Cut Is Actually the Industry Standard . Tom . Marks . October 7, 2019 . October 7, 2019 . .
  32. Web site: Epic's Battle With Apple and Google Actually Dates Back to Pac-Man . Takahashi . Mochizuki . Vlad . Savov . August 25, 2020 . August 25, 2020 . .
  33. Web site: GDC State of the Industry: Devs irked by 30 percent storefront revenue cuts . April 28, 2021 . April 29, 2021 . .
  34. Web site: Steam could be profitable with an 8% cut rather than 30%, says Tim Sweeney . Richard-Scott . Jones . August 23, 2017 . December 14, 2018 . PCGamesN.
  35. Web site: Microsoft shakes up PC gaming by reducing Windows store cut to just 12 percent . Tom . Warren . April 29, 2021 . April 29, 2021 . .
  36. Web site: Cranmer . Brandon . September 11, 2022 . How to Get Exclusive Android Games That Aren't on the Google Play Store . November 25, 2022 . MUO . en-US.
  37. Web site: Gamasutra: Rebecca Fernandez's Blog - Where can I sell my Indie PC game?. www.gamasutra.com. December 5, 2015.
  38. Web site: ZOOM Platform - DRM-free Games. Retro re-releases and more! . ZOOM Platform . en.
  39. Web site: Reminder: Wii Shop closes January 30, 2019 - Nintendo Official Site. www.nintendo.com. June 14, 2019. December 28, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211228143940/https://www.nintendo.com/whatsnew/detail/reminder-wii-shop-closes-january-30-2019/. dead.