If You Buy More Than Two New Games a Year, You're in the Minority
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A new report reveals that buying more than two new games a year puts you in the minority, sparking discussion on gaming habits and industry business models.
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Read the primary article or dive into the live Hacker News thread when you're ready.
https://www.matthewball.co/all/stateofvideogaming2025 had an in-depth (very very..in-depth) dive into all these trends.
I buy games, but except for I think Call of Duty MW2, I don't think I've ever paid more than £20 for a game. I doubt the average purchase price is £70. Maybe if you limit to people who buy COD and Fifa (or Madden) every year?
What I do know is that by revenue, the video games industry more than twice the size of the film and music industries combined. It also is growing faster (>9% yoy). Mobile gaming alone is about the same size as the whole film industry.
Here is the source data (sorry I know it's not public) https://www.statista.com/outlook/amo/media/games/worldwide?c...
I'm willing to spend $20/month on Game Pass as an ongoing expense but never did feel great about spending the equivalent $60x4 on four games I could keep.
Then there are subscriptions like PS+ for Playstation that is about $15/mo and I get 3 games that I mostly add to my library and hardly play.
If I play half a game and get distracted or bored, I just stop. If I'm not naturally pulled back in, I don't care. The whole "guilt free spending" budget concept really shifted my perspective from wanting to "get my money's worth" to more "its spent, I had fun, what's next/interesting now?" approach.
They are vastly different worlds.