Boxed Video Game Sales Collapse in UK as Digital Revenues Flatten (theguardian.com) 23
An anonymous reader shares a report: As music sales and streaming revenue reaches a high of $3 billion -- the highest since 2001, not accounting for significant inflation -- the UK video game market, which has grown almost continually for decades, has shrunk by 4.4%. The most significant decline was in boxed video game sales, down 35%.
Data from Digital Entertainment and Retail Association (ERA) puts the total worth of the UK video game market in 2024 at $5.7 billion, double the music market and behind TV and movies at $6.2 billion. The numbers show a shift in players' purchasing habits that has been ongoing for years, from physical games to digital downloads and in-game purchases in popular, established games such as Fortnite and Roblox. Boxed games now account for 27.7% of new game sales in the UK, according to ERA data.
Data from Digital Entertainment and Retail Association (ERA) puts the total worth of the UK video game market in 2024 at $5.7 billion, double the music market and behind TV and movies at $6.2 billion. The numbers show a shift in players' purchasing habits that has been ongoing for years, from physical games to digital downloads and in-game purchases in popular, established games such as Fortnite and Roblox. Boxed games now account for 27.7% of new game sales in the UK, according to ERA data.
Third Route (Score:3)
Older (Score:2)
They don't even have to be that old. I picked up Skyrim special edition a few years after the original for something like $30. All DLC and graphical upgrades at half the price for the original game alone.
My go-to move now is to pick up XBox 360 and One games at estate sales. They can usually be had for between $5 and $10 each. Still plenty of fun to play. My daughter loves the Kinect games. I picked up the sensor and a half dozen games for something like $20.
What's the point of boxed again? (Score:3)
These days the only boxes worth having are those for various special collectors editions, and because of the sometimes crazy prices, they're not really worth it.
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Agreed. I remember when Neverwinter Nights came out, there was substantial and well made manual, and a really nice cloth map of the game region. I loved those kind of extras, but without them, 'meh'. That said, I'm old school and sometimes I still like having a hard copy of game so that I can play when company X goes under or pulls their servers, etc.
I like how GOG.com handles digital distrubution -- not just the DRM-free part, but you can usually download the actual install file(s) and keep a copy to reins
Re:What's the point of boxed again? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re: What's the point of boxed again? (Score:1)
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Back in the day, you at least had an actual box, interesting/different box art, and some goodies like cloth maps or extra physical things like that. If currently the contents are just a disc and a manual, might as well skip the costs.
These days the only boxes worth having are those for various special collectors editions, and because of the sometimes crazy prices, they're not really worth it.
Yeah, I still love my Fallout NV collector's kit https://www.reddit.com/r/fnv/c... [reddit.com]. Not a lot like that since.
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Re:What's the point of boxed again? (Score:4, Informative)
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Mine just came with this advertisement for another game with a QR code printed on the back that pointed to a tracking URL that just redirects to the homepage of the website now, and the publisher keeps DMCAing people who post direct links...
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Digital platforms only implement at most a very limited subset of these possibilities.
Pointless (Score:1)
What's the point of buying a boxed game if you immediately have to download gigabytes of updates and patches?
Re: Pointless (Score:1)
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Yeah, going "gold" used to mean something with software - the installation disc(s) were actually a final polished product. I understand the occasional need for a bug fix, but now it's like the boxed game is just a placeholder for the actual game which hardy resembles what's on the disc, lol.
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Old Big Box Games (Score:1)
What? (Score:2)
I literally cannot remember the last time I bought a boxed video game.
It may literally be Half-life Orange Box back in the day. I know that HL2 I bought on Steam (even though it was a very big download) because I already knew that the box was pointless as you had to download lots of updates even with the disc.
I have a box of old games at home that I've carried between three different houses in its time. I don't think I've added anything to it in years and the only reason I keep it is because those games d