Top 20 Game Publishers 38
Patrick Caldwell writes "Game Developer magazine recently released a list of the top 20 video game publishers. EA, Activision, Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony are the first five, as could probably have been predicted." From the article: "
For the third year in a row, Electronic Arts (EA) has grabbed the top slot on the "Top 20 Publishers" chart. EA reached an annual revenue of more than $3.1 billion, continued high output and received positive average reviews for its titles. However, the company faced some serious competition from fellow publishers like Activision, Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony, all of whom had very strong showings this year and rounded out the top 5 in that order."
Human resources? (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder whether these companies' HR departments are going to be slashdotted with resumes from unemployed homebrew game developers now.
Re:Human resources? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Human resources? (Score:1)
True, 1-5 may have been obvious, but not everybody knows who 6-20 are until having read the article.
The Full List (Score:5, Informative)
1. Electronic Arts
2. Activision
3. Microsoft Game Studios
4. Nintendo
5. Sony Computer Entertainment
6. Ubisoft
7. Konami
8. THQ
9. Sega Sammy Holdings
10. Take-Two Interactive
11. Namco
12. Vivendi Universal Games
13. Atari
14. SCi Games
15. Capcom
16. Square Enix
17. Bandai Games
18. Codemasters
19. Midway
20. LucasArts
News article (Score:3, Informative)
For the third-straight year, Electronic Arts has taken home the top slot in Game Developer magazine's yearly list of the top-20 video game publishers.
The list, published in the magazine's October 2005 issue, reads like a veritable "who's who" of popular game companies. Activision, Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony followed EA in finishing off the top 5 -- though a number of factors, including both revenue and game quality, determined where the publishers ranked.
EA was a no-brainer. With an annual revenue of more than $3.1 billion, EA is the largest video game publisher in the world. The company released 126 games during the past year -- the most of any game publisher -- among them new titles in some of its flagship franchises, including The Sims, Madden NFL and Medal of Honor.
A number of business moves in 2004 and early 2005 helped cement the company's position atop the publisher pack.
The acquisition of Criterion Games landed one of 2004's most critically acclaimed titles, Burnout 3, in EA's hands. And the signing of exclusive contracts with the NFL and ESPN meant EA Sports' Madden NFL 06 was the only game in town with real-life NFL players, coaches and teams, as football aficionados responded by buying more copies of the football game than the year before.
Other than Criterion, EA's business connections with two other major game companies increased its slice of the development pie. It purchased 19.9 percent of Ubisoft -- which the magazine ranked at No. 6 -- and took over publishing rights of Valve Software's Half-Life 2 from Vivendi Universal Games, which ranked at No. 12.
But, the magazine said, EA faced strong competition from the other top 5, especially Activision and Microsoft.
Activision, publisher of Doom 3 and the Tony Hawk series, saw one of the biggest increases, from No. 7 to No. 2, this year as it added three new development studios: Toys for Bob, Beenox and Vicarious Visions. "Activision's policy of leaving studios more autonomous after purchasing them works just as well as EA's consolidation method," Game Developer noted.
Though it was Activision that bumped last year's No. 2., Microsoft Game Studios, down a spot, the magazine expects the company behind the Xbox and Halo to rebound. With a determined fall lineup that includes the release of the Xbox 360 and a bevy of "well-reviewed first-party games," Microsoft's switch from PC to Xbox game development has resulted in a swift ascension to the upper echelon of publishers. Expect a stronger commitment to the Japanese games market with the 360, as well, the magazine said.
Nintendo's claim of the No. 4 spot can largely be credited to the strong performance of its Nintendo DS and Game Boy Advance platforms, while Sony slipped to No. 5 this year despite the critical success of games like God of War and Ratchet and Clank 3.
Take Two Interactive, which publishes Rockstar's Grand Theft Auto series, saw a drop to No. 10, partly due to the controversy surrounding Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas' "Hot Coffee" sexual conten mod and resulting political and economic fallout. And since Take Two also publishes value-brand games developed by Global Star, its ranking has suffered because the magazine's list takes into consideration average review scores of the publishers' games. But a strong showing from Take Two's new sports game line -- 2K Sports, formerly Sega's Visual Concepts -- means that "next year is anyone's game," the magazine said.
In selecting its list, Game Developer used more than "raw revenue vales" to determine the rankings. Six criteria determined a company's placing: annual turnover, number of title releases, average review score, producer quality, reliability of milestone payments, and quality of staff pay and perks.
"This year's research reflects the continuing
Wow... (Score:2)
What ever happened to games like xcom, moo, spellcraft, privateer, etc? I'd kill for a game that had a fraction of that inovation today... instead of just another year of madden or yet another need for speed.
Re:Wow... (Score:3, Insightful)
Feel the Magic XX/YY
Kirby's Canvas Course
Trace Memory
Castlevania is great, but is basically Symphony of the night in your pocket.
Games that follow the same franchise can be innovative, unfortunately most aren't. Also don't pass over a game just because the graphics look childish, sometimes those are the best ones.
Of course, these games may not be
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Stop complaining. (Score:2)
It was still a quite innovative game, I never played elite or even heard of it. Shrug.
I don't own a DS.
Xbox, PS2, GC, and PC.
What about BSD? (Score:2)
(I kid)
Re:What about BSD? (Score:1)
Re:Whatever (Score:1)
Too fucking bad. Now they'll just go down in history as a slave driver shop that can't compete with a quality product. That must rely on lawyers and monopoly bully tactics to survive.
Re:Whatever (Score:1)
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Of course football is different to american football, there are lots of countries that play it, and I don't think they can do anythin to stop you using the international team names (although EA have the rights to the World Cup etc.), and they can licence some
'Top' Publishers. Right... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:'Top' Publishers. Right... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, with that said...
EA is a horrible company to deal with, but you can't say the quality of EA's games are heading down the crapper. EA's games averaged 81% in a Rotten Tomatoes-esque review of all the games they had released in the last year. The only companies in the top twenty that beat EA here were LucasArts with 81.6% and Microsoft
Re:'Top' Publishers. Right... (Score:2)
Re:'Top' Publishers. Right... (Score:2)
Why? True, one data point cannot be trusted as represetative of an entire system. If LA was an aberration from the norm, that in no way implies the EA norm is that much better than there rest of the world. Just because they cleaned it up does not imply this, either. It was a PR mess. What led you to that conclusion?
Re:'Top' Publishers. Right... (Score:2)
Living in the Bay Area and having friends at different game companies, mostly
Twenty Publishers? (Score:1)
A wee bit slanted? (Score:2)
EA takes number one when you consider game quality? Given the sheer number of crap they put out every year, their ranking should've gone way down simply due to poor reviews. The rest of the top 5 I can understand (Doom 3 boosted Activision's sales and the rest are first-party publishers.)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:1)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:2)
I call bullshit.
Maybe Activision has the odd quality title like "Doom 3", but also release total crap like "Fantastic Four", "Madagascar", and "Monster Garage". Each one of those titles is worse than anything EA put out la
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:1)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:2)
Battlefield 2 (PC)
Burnout Revenge
Oddworld: Stranger's Wrath
All released this year. And for that matter, take another look at the sports games -- Madden is going stale, but "NBA Street v3" and "Fight Night: Round 2" are chart-toppers on Metacritic, with plenty of 100% reviews.
The myth is that EA gets away with crap because they are #1. The fact is that they are #1 because they are better than any other publisher in the industry. Period.
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:1)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:1)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:2)
Re:A wee bit slanted? (Score:2)
If you want to switch the topic to developers, then I agree, those guys are the best of the bunch. Then again, EA has some solid internal teams too -- Criterion (Burnout games), Maxis (SimCity, Sims, Spore), and Bond Team (Everything or Nothing, From Russia With Love).
shovels (Score:2)
I haven't purchased an EA game in years.
Selection Criteria (Score:1)
If EA is number one, I sure feel sorry for the guys working at the other 19 companies!
Are capcom_spouse and activision_spouse far behind?