My Message close
GAME JOBS
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
May 19, 2013
 
All You Need is Love [3]
 
Students: Tips for Learning Game Development Over the Summer [1]
 
All Your Nintendo Let's Plays Are Belong To Nintendo? [83]
 
Even Further Down the Curation Rabbithole [12]
 
Systems of Control in F2P [28]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
May 19, 2013
 
Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC
Sr. Network Systems Engineer
 
Amazon Game Studios
Sr. Game Designer
 
Treyarch / Activision
Technical Animator
 
Amazon Game Studios
Quality Assurance Manager
 
Amazon Game Studios
Lead 3D Environment Artist
 
Amazon Game Studios
Game Graphics Engineer
spacer
Latest Press Releases
spacer View All     RSS spacer
 
May 19, 2013
 
Zeeek and The Secret of
Space Octopuses heading
to...
 
Battle bad 'bots in Bad
Bots, available now on...
 
Temple Run 2 Adds New
Terrain and Obstacles
in...
 
Little Amazon runs
through Android
 
Command Ops gets a
Massive Update!
spacer
About
spacer Editor-In-Chief:
Kris Graft
Blog Director:
Christian Nutt
Senior Contributing Editor:
Brandon Sheffield
News Editors:
Mike Rose, Kris Ligman
Editors-At-Large:
Leigh Alexander, Chris Morris
Advertising:
Jennifer Sulik
Recruitment:
Gina Gross
Education:
Gillian Crowley
 
Contact Gamasutra
 
Report a Problem
 
Submit News
 
Comment Guidelines
Sponsor

 
Nintendo's full game downloads off to a promising start
Nintendo's full game downloads off to a promising start
 

October 25, 2012   |   By Eric Caoili

Comments Post A Comment

More: Console/PC, Business/Marketing





Nintendo is new to selling downloadable versions of its retail games online, but it's already managed to convince a considerable portion of 3DS owners to purchase them through the eShop.

Depending on the title, downloadable releases make up between more than 3 percent to over 10 percent of total sales for first-party 3DS titles globally (other console makers have not shared data for their digital sales, though Sony has told Gamasutra that downloads make up a significant percentage of total sales for PS Vita games).

And in Japan, downloads for one unnamed first-party 3DS game made up 15 percent of total sales. Nintendo releases these digital games simultaneously with their physical counterparts, and sells them at full price (typically $40 in the U.S.) on the eShop, but retailers are free to discount download code cards for individual 3DS games.

Nintendo pointed out in an investors meeting that it managed to reach these percentages without any mass media advertisements for the download copies. It intends to start highlighting the downloadable versions of games in ads soon, starting with Japanese commercials for Animal Crossing: New Leaf.

The company shared several other insights on its downloadable games, noting that for New Super Mario Bros. 2, U.S. consumers were most likely to buy the digital versions, followed by Japanese 3DS owners. Nintendo described its percentages in Europe and Australia as relatively small.

And download ratios for games intended to be played for a short time every day, such as Brain Age and Art Academy, were higher than other titles. The company previously attributed this to players preferring to have a version they can load any time without needing to carry a cartridge.

While it waited much longer than its competitors to start selling full game downloads, Nintendo has been aggressive in making them a major part of its digital strategy recently -- it started offering digital versions of third-party games, added older first-party titles to the eShop, and promised to make full game downloads immediately available for Wii U when the console launches next month.
 
 
Top Stories

image
The laws behind Nintendo's Let's Play crackdown
image
New layoffs reach Trion
image
How developers mess up immersion (you might be doing it wrong)
image
Steam Trading Cards: The next-gen of achievements?


   
 
Comments


none
 
Comment:
 




 
UBM Tech