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OCTOBER 2015 THE BUSINESS OF VIDEO GAMES ISSUE 837 FRIDAY JUNE 12TH 2015

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Page 1: MCV837 June 12th

OCTOBER 2015

THE BUSINESS OF VIDEO GAMES

ISSUE 837 FRIDAY JUNE 12TH 2015

Page 2: MCV837 June 12th

Sébastien Loeb Rally EVO © 2015 Published and Developed by Milestone S.r.l. All rights reserved. All manufacturers, accessory suppliers, names, tracks, sponsors, brands and associated imagery featured in this game are trademarks and/or copyrighted materials of their respective owners

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ETERS OF

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“...a passion for their subject matter that can

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SEBASTIENLOEBRALLYEVO.COM#SEBASTIENLOEBRALLYEVO

Page 3: MCV837 June 12th

GAMESTOP REVEALS ITS $500M PLANS FOR MERCHANDISE P14

CAN’T BE ‘STOPPEDTHE BUSINESS OF VIDEO GAMES

ISSUE 837 FRIDAY JUNE 12TH 2015

GUIDE TO E3THE ALTERNATIVE

PLUS SEGA ON PC, IP AND SKIPPING E3 WHY DOES EVERYONE HATE FREE-TO-PLAY?

Page 4: MCV837 June 12th

E3 is all about the big announcements. Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo and more revealing the next Mario or Halo or Uncharted. But it doesn’t have to be. Over the next six pages are our picks of the tendo gems that you might want to hunt down at E3 this year. Mobile games, indie titles and VR projects that might take you by surprise. We’ve also spoken to the UK industry to discover tendo top tips and advice on getting the most out of the show and LA, while we’ve recounted some of the tendo iconic moments from E3’s 20-year history. So enjoy the show, and remember (REDACTED)

What is it?An exquisite and immersive PC and PS4 game from the makers Journey. It’s being published by 505 Games

Where will I find it?505 Games. Permanent Meeting Room #505 (yes, that’s the right number)

What is it?Gamers have paid £1.8m so the creators of Banjo Kazooie can make a game just like Banjo Kazooie.

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

What is it?A 2D-meets-3D side-scrolling co-op shooter, where gamers can also fire at enemies in the background. It’s from the makers of Crackdown 2.

Where will I find it?Paradox Interactive. South Hall Off Floor Meeting Rooms #2861 and #2960

What is it?A beautifully crafted art game where players must guide a blind girl who is searching for a cat.

Where will I find it?Team 17. South Hall Meeting Room #2959

In what has to be one of the most extreme reactions to a game announcement, Nintendo unveiled The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess at E3 2004 and grown men wept (really). Nintendo’s Shigeru Miyamoto even leapt on stage dressed as hero Link. But there was actually two iconic moments from this conference. The other was when new Nintendo US exec Reggie Fils-Aime took to the stage and introduced himself by declaring: “My name is Reggie. I’m about kicking ass, I’m about taking names, and we’re about making games.” An internet legend was born.

Forget Call of Duty and Halo for a moment, there are

a host of wonderful looking independently-developed

titles that could easily prove to be the next best thing.

CONFIDENTIAL

04June 12th 2015

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

CHECK OUT THESE INDIE GAMES

ABZU YOOKA-LAYLEE

A MOMENT IN TIME: ZELDA BRINGS DOWN THE HOUSE (2004)

HOLLOWPOINT BEYOND EYES

LA

Page 5: MCV837 June 12th

What is it?A stylish gun fighting dungeon crawler. Intrigued? You should be. It’s published by Hotline Miami firm Devolver.

Where will I find it?PlayStation. West Hall Booth #4144

What is it?A real Alice In Wonderland-inspired pop-up book that uses sensors to control a game. Think Wonderbook, only with an actual book worth owning.

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

What is it?A sci-fi high-speed flying racing game for 3DS, where galactic disputes are settled on futuristic tracks... of sorts.

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

What is it?A huge cartoony co-op dungeon crawler, with frantic four-player gameplay and combo attacks.

Where will I find it?Wired Productions. South Hall – Off Floor Meeting Room #3054

“Uber Pool – you can go anywhere in the city for $7 if you don’t mind sharing a cab – which you rarely do.”

- PR genius on a budget

“It is a $3 to $5 return on the underground to the show from Hollywood. Get a hotel shuttle to the tube and save $60 and a lot of time in a cab each way.”

- Publishing veteran

“If you can still remember how to skateboard, take it. Or borrow a micro-scooter. All that time saved dashing between halls, hotels and other venues add up to hours you can cram even more meetings in. It sounds daft, but it works for me. And it makes it easy for people to spot you when looking for you for a meeting.”

- Master Skateboarder-cum-journalist

“Taxis can be a nightmare, go out from the South Hall main entrance and go left following the building. Then you will see a taxi rank. Do not panic if there is a queue as LA cabbies are like ants, when they smell business they come very quickly.”

- Iron Man

“Use the CityMapper app. It is time to ditch Google Maps.”

-Former Street Fighter

June 12th 2015

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

05

AVOID THE CONCOURSE:SHHH, YOU CAN SNEAK BETWEEN THE TWO HALLS VIA THIS SECRET WALKWAY

CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER! SUPER DUNGEON BROSENTER THE GUNGEON LIFESPEED

TOP SECRET TRAVEL TIPS

Page 6: MCV837 June 12th

06June 12th 2015

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

What is it?A first person ‘experience’ about an astronaut perilously floating in space. Think Gravity: The Video Game.

Where will I find it?505 Games. Permanent Meeting Room #505 (yep, that is the right number)

What is it?It’s the acclaimed space sim from UK-based Frontier Developments, now with Oculus Rift support. The press really love this one.

Where will I find it?Frontier Developments. Permanent Meeting Room #511a

What is it?Paper Crane Game’s VR title asks you to hunt down and photograph dinosaurs. What more convincing do you need?

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

What is it?A VR arial combat game that isn’t set in space (which is a nice change). It is also for mobile devices.

Where will I find it?Oculus. West Hall, Booth #5400

There will be a host of VR products announced at

E3. But there are also some that have already been

revealed that will be worth your time taking a look at.

CHECK OUT THESE VR GAMES

ADR1FT ELITE DANGEROUS THE LOST VALLEY VR BANDIT SIX

“Barneys Beanery – behind the Red Rock – on Sunset is the best place for pool – outside of the Santa Monica area.”- A UK games industry superstar

“Know that the person in control of the mechanical bull at the Saddle Ranch does take bribes to slow it down for you.”- A reliable source from within Xbox

“Do not have too many beers before the Sony event on the Monday. Sun plus beer plus jet lag plus dark room is a challenging formula.”- A supermarket buyer who defi nitely didn’t fall asleep during that Destiny demo

“Why not try Harvelle in Santa Monica. It’s near the pier, non-touristy and has jazz music and burlesque shows. Established 1931, it has a very nice atmosphere. Alternatively, the bungalow, Santa Monica. It’s a very popular local high class cockails bar/club in Santa Monica.”- PR party planner

“After a hard day, head to Sunset Strip. It’s perfect to meet friends and visit the bars and clubs – special mention to the Sky Bar at the Mondrian hotel. If you can get in.”- Game buying guru

CONFIDENTIAL NIGHTS OUT

A MOMENT IN TIME: THE BEATLES ROCK E3 (2009)

As game announcements go, you don’t get much bigger than this. In 2007 and 2008, E3 had moved to a smaller venue, with smaller booths and fewer visitors. It was designed to make the event easier to do business, but the results were two largely forgettable expos. In 2009, ESA brought the full spectacle back, and publishers went crazy, with JayZ concerts and epic game announcements. The biggest had to be The Beatles: Rock Band, revealed during Xbox’s press conference by Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney. Yoko Ono, widow of John Lennon, and Olivia Harrison, widow of George Harrison, also appeared at the press conference.

Page 7: MCV837 June 12th

June 12th 2015

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

06

What is it?A narrative-driven adventure, where players alternate between two different characters to uncover the mysteries of The Assembly.

Where will I find it?NDreams. Off Floor Meeting Room, Concourse #8802

What is it?Turbo Button lets gamers live that illegal fantasy of texting while driving, utilising Samsung Gear VR. Can you stay on the road and keep your friends happy?

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

SMS RACINGTHE ASSEMBLY

E3’s shortest speech was at the very fi rst expo. PlayStation US boss Steve Race took to the stage to reveal the price of Sony’s fi rst games console. “299,” he said before returning to his seat to wild applause. Sega tried to hit back by releasing its signifi cantly more expensive Saturn console that week. It didn’t work.

A MOMENT IN TIME: PLAYSTATION IS BORN (1995)

“The Original Pantry is a great old diner near the Convention Center and serves meals round the clock - but it’s cash only. It’s also a great place for journalists to hang out and earwig developers talking about things they shouldn’t.”

- Writer and photographer extraordinaire

“Show food is disgusting and it’s a nightmare to get a good glass of wine. You need to head to Palm Restaurant, where you will bump into the great and the good of the industry escaping from publishers competing sound systems and enjoying an excellent glass of chilled white Californian Wine. If your boss has ‘stepped out for a meeting’ they will be here.”

- PR who clearly enjoys an occasional glass of plonk

“If you have a fridge in your room, freeze a bottle of water overnight, stick it in your bag and you’ll have cold water all day as it thaws.”

- Chilled UK games retail expert

“Truffl e cheese fries from Umami Burger are always a good idea.”

- Microsoft exec with unusual taste

“Turn your ‘My Fitness Pal’ app off . It’s all about eating your own body weight for breakfast. Especially as you won’t have time for anything unless you are partial to copious boiled sweets with some company’s logo running through it. After 18 E3s, I still can’t work out if there is any fl avour to them.”

- UK games boss of one of the world’s biggest entertainment companies

FOOD AND DRINK SECRETS

Page 8: MCV837 June 12th

08June 12th 2015

What is it?Who says mobile games can’t be deep? This is a 30-hour RPG akin to Baldur’s Gate and is looking impressive.

Where will I find it?505 Games. Permanent Meeting Room #505 (It is definitely the right number)

What is it?Players have to imitate cartoon facial expressions and their friends have to work out what face they’re pulling from the pictures on a screen. You’re going to look silly.

Where will I find it?IndieCade. South Hall, Booth #601

What is it?Popular Chinese mobile games developer Seasun arrives in US and Europe with this turn-based three versus three MOBA.

Where will I find it?Seasun. South Hall, Booth #423

What is it?Do you remember the great Hitman Absolution spin-off game Hitman Sniper Challenge? This is pretty much an advanced-version of that.

Where will I find it?Square Enix. South Hall, Booth #2001

Hidden away in the depths of E3 are a number of

smartphone and tablet games that have the capacity to

compete with any PC or console title. Such as these...

CHECK OUT THESE MOBILE GAMES

EMBER FACE IT! RELICS OF GODS HITMAN SNIPER

The PS4 vs Xbox One showdown at E3 2013 was defi ned by the moment Jack Tretton, PlayStation’s US boss, took to the stage and announced that PS4 would allow gamers to trade-in their games. It followed a proposed plan by Microsoft to tie games to Xbox One, which was greeted with a big consumer backlash. Ultimately, Tretton just announced: ‘We’ll do what we always have’, but it sent Microsoft reeling, and the audience into a frenzy.

A MOMENT IN TIME: PS4 SUPPORTS USED GAMES (2013)

Nokia’s bid to enter the games industry featured a squad of hip-hop dancers and games that suff ered from serious frame rate issues. If that wasn’t enough to undermine its bid for gamers’ attention, the fi rm announced the machine would cost $299, three times the price of its biggest rival, the Game Boy Advance. Worst of all, the fi rm announced the price by writing it on a bikini-clad woman - which out of context, is all sorts of inappropriate. Although, even in context, it’s still pretty bad.

A MOMENT IN TIME: N-GAGE LAUNCH IS A DISASTER (2003)

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

Page 9: MCV837 June 12th

THE ALTERNATIVE GUIDE TO E3

“Register as a Retail VIP Buyer – the lounge is fantastic.”

- A trustworthy source in box-shifting

“Don’t push to the front of the fi rst party gala presentations. Keep to the back so you can leave as soon as it’s over and get to the front of the car valet queue.”

- Marketing smart-arse

“It might be hot outside but the meeting rooms can be chilly. Layer up.”

- Former Nintendo marketing whizz

“Bring your ID with you: There are now random checks at E3 entrance to make sure you are the person that your pass claims to be.”

- Everyone’s favourite Italian PR

“Devolver sets up an E3 alternative in the cark park next to Hooters. It’s outside, has beer and a BBQ.”

- Award-winning PR know-it-all

“Stop Moaning. You’re in LA.”

- Happy supermarket boss

“Make Konami your last appointment of the day: it has its own pub.”

- Legendary games writer

“Take a meeting out in the open air at least once a day. It really is daytime outside the halls.”

- Games publishing legend

“Get to the Convention Center early and you can get in, but only if you’re an exhibitor. If you’re friendly and very discrete, you can sweet talk the staff to allow you a sneaky go on the new games before any lines start.”

- TV presenter turned PR turned rock god

UNTOLD SHOW FLOOR TIPS

June 12th 201509

PRESENTS5 SECOND FACTS

Xbox ONE Rock Candy Wired Controller - PDP Design and manufacture the Offi cially Licenced

Microsoft Rock Candy Wired Controller for Xbox ONE

[email protected]

The stats you need to know about this year’s Electronics Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles...

5,000E3 exhibitors can bring this many consumers to the expo this year, 10 per

cent of all visitors

273The number of exhibitors set for the LA Convention

Center next week

32There are just over 30

working days between E3 and Gamescom

20 yearsThe E3 expo launched in 1995 and has run every

year since

Page 10: MCV837 June 12th

CHEAT SHEET

10June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com

by Christopher Dring XBOX says Halo 5: Guardians will be the biggest game it has ever launched.

Product manager Kuran Kapoor made the assertion ahead of E3, which he says will boast ‘incredible new announcements’ for the IP.

The Xbox One exclusive launches at a busy time for shooters in the games industry, releasing near to Rainbow Six: Siege, Call of Duty: Black Ops III and Star Wars: Battlefront. But Kapoor is bullish over its chances.

“Halo 5 is arguably going to be the biggest game we have ever launched here at Xbox,” he said. “With over fi ve months until release, we’ve already begun to give fans a taste

with the multiplayer beta, Halo: Nightfall teasing the backstory and, most recently, the #HuntTheTruth social campaign.

“We have some amazing announcements to make at E3, and as we move into Q4 we will be delivering a blockbuster launch followed by an engaging sustain campaign. We are releasing in close proximity to some great games, but we couldn’t be more confi dent that Halo 5 will deliver upon expectations, both with our fans and retail partners.”

Set for release on October 27th, Guardians has seen a run-up campaign over the last 12 months. This includes the Nightfall series, which acts as a prelude to the upcoming title.

MAD Catz has dismissed fears that there won’t be enough shelf space for Rock Band 4.

The popular music title returns to retail at a busy time for peripheral-heavy products, which will see LEGO Dimensions, Guitar Hero, Skylanders and Disney Infi nity all vying for attention.

But the fi rm told MCV that it is being careful not to bombard the High Street with plastic add-ons – at least initially – and will only be releasing a couple of SKUs.

“Retail space is an interesting challenge for us due to the footprint of the hardware,” European marketing manager Rachel Gordon told MCV. “We have been strategic in our off ering at launch,

so we are not fl ooding the market with a whole range of products.

“You can’t make the form factor any smaller. But what we have done is reduced the SKU count. We have two

focus bundles, which are proven to be the most popular consumer

choices: the band in a box and the guitar bundle. By

not having things like the microphone stand, guitar straps and all the additional accessories, we’ve gone back to basics.

“We are also working closely with our retail

partners to maximise additional promotion and

exposure outside of simple shelf space, including digital and pre-

order campaigns.”

Halo 5 will be Xbox’s ‘biggest game launch’

Rock Band 4 going ‘back to basics’ in the battle for retail shelf space

Halo 5: Guardians will feature heavily at E3, says Xbox’s Kapoor

£10m

£15m

£20m

£5m

Market DataWith no new releases hitting stores, the market falls to just £7m

Week EndingJune 6th

£9.7m338,223

units

Week EndingMay 30th

£15.1m419,370

units

Week EndingMay 23rd

£7m248,828

units

UK RETAIL TOP 10

PRE-ORDER TOP 10

THE WITCHER 3: WILD HUNT BANDAI NAMCO12 Grand Theft Auto V Rockstar

3 FIFA 15 EA

4 Splatoon Nintendo

5 Battlefi eld Hardline EA

6 Project CARS Bandai Namco

7 Farming Simulator 15 Koch Media

8 Destiny Activision Blizzard

9 Minecraft: Xbox Edition Microsoft

10 Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare Activision

FALLOUT 4 (PS4) BETHESDA12 Batman Arkham Knight + Harley Quinn DLC (PS4) Warner Bros

3 Amiibo Smash Pikmin + Olimar (Wii U) Nintendo

4 Fallout 4 (XO) Bethesda

5 Amiibo Smash Bowser Jr (Wii U) Nintendo

6 Uncharted: The Nathan Drake Collection (PS4) Sony

7 Amiibo Smash Dr Mario (Wii U) Nintendo

8 Batman Arkham Knight + Harley Quinn DLC (XO) Warner Bros

9 Until Dawn – Extended Edition (PS4) Sony

10 FIFA 16 (PS4) EA

SPONSORED BY

Page 11: MCV837 June 12th

CHEAT SHEET

11www.mcvuk.com June 12th 2015

FANS can pre-order two E3 blockbusters for £80 from Tesco.

The off er is available for just the week of E3, Monday, June 15th to Friday, June 19th, and will be available via the Tesco website.

The retailer says the deal will include the standard editions of ‘key software releases’ that will likely form a major part of the Los Angeles-based expo.

Tesco isn’t the only retail outlet going big at E3 next week. GAME has launched a dedicated E3

website (e3.game.co.uk), which will include live-reporting and streams. The company is also off ering £5 in Reward Points to those that pre-order four or more games from June 14th.

“There is a huge amount of buzz around the event, so we want to make sure that gamers don’t miss a single second of it and most importantly, can get their hands on the latest games straight away,” said GAME’s marketing and insight director Fred Prego.

by Alex Calvin PRE-ORDERS are falling because gamers are paying extra attention to review scores, said GameStop international boss Mike Mauler.

The retailer said that – much like in the UK – pre-orders have started to dip in America. But insisted that the number of consumers coming out day one remains healthy.

“Pre-orders have declined a little bit here, but the percentage week one sales versus pre-orders has increased a lot,” Mauler explained.

“Pre-orders might be lower but in the fi rst week instead of selling

120 per cent of pre-orders, you’re selling 150 per cent of pre-orders. The demand is still there, but there’s been a shift in terms of pre-ordering the product.

“There is more attention paid to the Metacritic score than in the past. Two or three years ago it wasn’t really a topic of conversation, but now the week before release it’s getting a lot of attention.”

GameTrack data revealed to MCV in April that 3.4m UK gamers were either pre-ordering fewer games, or had stopped advance ordering altogether.

Tesco prepares week-long E3 promotion

GameStop: Metacritic to blame for game pre-order problems

The words: ‘E3 isn’t as relevant as it used to be’ are invariably said by two

sets of people: those with a vested interest in its decline and those justifying the fact that their boss isn’t sending them.

Next week, the gaming world’s attention will be fi xed on LA as six major games makers put on press conferences totaling over eight hours. Irrelevant, it is not.

But like any show that has endured two decades, it has had to change.

E3 was once a trade fair where products were discovered and deals were signed. It was a show for retailers fi rst, then media and then consumers – who were not invited but eagerly followed the announcements.

As fewer triple-A products were launched and the number of retailers dwindled, E3 switched its primary audience to the media. But what exactly is the ‘media’ in today’s world?

The stories that MCV has overheard in the build-up to E3 have been telling.

Take Xbox UK: for the fi rst time, the fi rm isn’t fl ying any traditional media to the show and is instead focusing on YouTubers. In fact, it’s not even putting on the usual hotel shuttle buses for execs. Why else would you ditch this unless you knew the number of industry delegates had dipped?

I’ve spoken to journalists who, instead of receiving invites to press events, have been sent live-streaming links. There will be press who fl y 5,500 miles only to sit in a hotel and watch the conferences on their laptops.

Then there’s the access to the talent: or, rather, the lack of it. Two publishers have told MCV that they’re not doing schedules and that we should instead ‘swing by the booth’. But travelling to E3 is expensive and time consuming, and rocking up to a crammed booth on the off -chance that you might see someone is not worth the trip.

Couple this with the news that 5,000 consumers will be attending E3 this year, and you can see that the gamer has become the priority. But is it really a surprise? They are the ones now funding games, helping with development and setting up YouTube channels more popular than any specialist site.

E3 has no need for the middle-man, it seems. Retailers and media are there, but this is a show about the gamers.

Take Nintendo: fans will get much more out of the platform holder’s own ‘Treehouse’ online show than they will from any specialist outlet.

Or Ubisoft: gamers can pop into London next week and play the new Assassin’s Creed before journalists even put pen to paper.

Let’s cut the pretence, E3 is no longer the best business-to-business expo in games. Maybe it’s the best one for consumers. [email protected]

THE EDITOR

Like any show that has endured for two decades, E3 has had to change.

E3 MAY BE OVER FOR YOU

Mauler says that while pre-orders may be down compared to past years, week one sales remain strong

Page 12: MCV837 June 12th

E3 is offi cially upon us, providing games publishers a huge opportunity to advertise their forthcoming Autumn and Winter titles – and beyond. Traditionally, however, this is not a time of great activity for games and consoles TV advertising in the UK.

Looking at the previous fi ve years, we can assess the total TV activity in the market across the week incorporating E3. As expected, there have been relatively few major campaigns during the period.

2014 saw the strongest year of support, with 575 individual TV

viewer ratings (TVRs), which was a year-on-year increase.

This was in no doubt due to the dominance of mobile titles, such as Game of War and Clash of Clans, which are not dependent on E3 but have shown a maintained level of activity over recent years.

In terms of boxed games, Nintendo has continually supported its new releases during the week of E3, looking to benefi t from the huge PR opportunity that E3 off ers, in addition to consistent TV support to drive potential success at the tills.

E3 – A SHOW LIKE NO OTHERThis week, GameTime examines the eff ect the biggest show in games has on TV advertising

MCV GameTime is provided by Generation Media0207 255 4650 | www.generationmedia.co.uk

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VRs

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com12

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WHILE many view MotoGP as F1’s poor relation, the truth is that MotoGP is a phenomenon that continues to grow and grow.

This is due in no small part to the fact that the sport itself is less a procession of cars and more of a butt-clenching thrill-ride with an ever-present sense of danger. It’s the kind of exhilarating motorsport that has seen viewing fi gures continually rise over its 65-year history, now

being broadcast into almost 300 million homes worldwide.

Some might have bemoaned the 2014 season for being dominated by Marquez – with no one mounting a suitable challenge to one of MotoGP’s greatest riders. Things are very diff erent this year, however, with legend and long-time fan favourite Valentino Rossi coming off the grid and looking to make a serious impact.

The MotoGP games, now under Milestone’s wing (a studio with more bike simulation experience than any other studio worldwide) are undergoing something of a

rebirth thanks to the power of new-gen consoles. Previously only available on PS4, MotoGP 15 will now be available on both PS4 and Xbox One. Milestone has wasted no time improving on last year’s iteration with vastly better physics and handling. These benefi t from the studio’s recent experience with the best-selling bike racer, Ride, not to mention Milestone’s unparalleled access to every major bike manufacturer on the planet.

Fans of the series will also fi nd that this year’s off ering has signifi cantly more in the way of content – containing riders and

bikes from MotoGP’s 14 and 15 seasons, as well as the addition of four-stroke bikes and riding legends. Players will now be able to relive last year’s greatest moments, attempt to re-write history or, in the boots of a resurgent Rossi, attempt to take Marquez’s title.

The main draw this year has to be the exceptional career mode, where players can eff ectively build their own racing team and rider from scratch. It’s a ludicrously in-depth experience that off ers hundreds of hours of gameplay – before they’ve even touched upon the fully-featured online modes.

BRAND PROFILE MOTOGP PQube’s marketing boss Geraint Evans on the racing series

MARKETING

Page 13: MCV837 June 12th
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When GameStop revealed its latest financial results, the firm told

its investors it had a new dream: it wants to turn its fledgling merchandise operation (expected to be worth up to $200m this year) into a $500m business by 2018. Some of its investors were perplexed by this target. There was no question that merchandise is a fast-growing segment of the games market, but how did it hope to almost triple its business in just three years?

Well, within days of that statement, any lingering questions were answered when GameStop offered $140m (£92m) to acquire US geek merchandise behemoth ThinkGeek (owned by GeekNet).

“Merchandise is a great market for us,” president and EVP of GameStop International Mike Mauler tells MCV.

“We started experimenting with merchandise a while ago – we sold Call of Duty games and had some mugs and t-shirts to sell as tie-ins. But the consumer enthusiasm and demand around the products was just tremendous. By August,

we’ll have an expanded range of products in every store worldwide.

“We will continue to work with the publishers to expand our franchise marketing efforts around video gaming and new releases.”

GET ‘EM TO THE GEEKGameStop is not limiting itself to just games, of course. The firm is targeting all forms of geek culture, including products based around the upcoming Star Wars movie.

“Originally, we were just selling game-related products, focused on the big franchises like Call of Duty, Assassin’s Creed and Pokémon,” Mauler says.

“We’ve expanded that range to include movie releases and TV shows. Now it’s everything from Game of Thrones to Star Wars. The biggest launch of this year will probably be Star Wars, and you’ll see tonnes of merchandise based on that with the launch of the film at the end of the year. What our consumers have told us is that

GameStop’s $500m merchandise dream

GameStop has splashed $140m on ThinkGeek to transform its merchandise business. Alex Calvin catches up with EVP and president of GameStop International, Mike Mauler, to

discuss the retailer’s bid to become the king of geek toys

GameStop is currently testing its Zing Pop Culture brand in Australia

Consumer enthusiasm and demand around our merchandise products have been just tremendous.

Mike Mauler, GameStop

GAMESTOP’S recent push into merchandise is part of the firm’s effort to counter-act the decline in physical games. But the business is doing particularly well in the digital space, too, argues GameStop’s international boss Mike Mauler.

“We love digital – we are going to have in excess of $1bn in digital sales this year,” he says. “Our goal is to offer consumers the products however they want it, whether they want a physical game, used or new, or a digital download, our goal is to be able to offer that to consumers

through our omnichannels anyway they want to consume it. “

The retail behemoth owns its own digital channels, too, including browser games portal Kongregate, which Mauler says is starting to prove itself outside of the US.

“It is doing well internationally,” he explains. “I can’t tell you the number of users that are international, but I know it’s in the double digits. It’s something around 40 per cent are consumers from outside of the United States.”

DIGITAL IS NOT THE ENEMY

14June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com

INTERVIEW MIKE MAULER, GAMESTOP

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GameStop is going beyond games with its merchandise off ering

Some analysts have noted GameStop’s strong international capabilities would help GeekNet expand its licensing capabilities outside of the US.

Mike Mauler, GameStop

it’s not just about games in this category, they like to experience films, TV shows and so on in lots of different ways, and come to our stores and buy those products.”

The ThinkGeek deal may be the headline grabber in GameStop’s merchandise plans, but it’s actually the latest in a series of projects at the firm. In Australia, Mauler and his team opened a string of physical shops called Zing Pop Culture, which stock exactly these sort of ‘geek’ items. And that outlet is now set to expand globally – it could even reach the UK.

“We ended the quarter with six Zing stores,” Mauler says. “We are continuing to pilot more stores in that region, and also want to test that concept in a few other markets. I wouldn’t rule out any region at this time. But at the moment we are focusing on regions where we already have a physical presence.”

BACK TO BLIGHTYOverall, GameStop’s presence in the UK remains limited. The firm closed the only two shops it had in the country in 2011, and now places all of its emphasis on its UK website. And there remains no plans to do more than that.

“As you know our UK business is strictly omnichannel,” says Mauler. “So consumers go through our site to buy and trade-in games and from a brick and mortar perspective,

you have GAME there in the UK. We don’t have any plans beyond that, except to continue to expand our omnichannel business.”

As the games market goes increasingly digital, the chances of GameStop entering the UK fully diminish by the day. But the firm is always eyeing up its next move. And with ThinkGeek primarily a US-based website, there’s a big opportunity for Mauler to take that brand – and its expertise – into new markets.

“Some analysts have noted that GameStop’s strong international capabilities would help Geeknet to expand its licensing capabilities outside the US,” admits Mauler.

GameStop’s merchandise bid comes at a crucial time for games retail. A number of high profile delays to big blockbusters means there are genuine concerns over a lack of physical content for High Street retailers to sell.

But Mauler, ever the optimist, is not concerned.

“There have been some games delayed, such as The Division, Uncharted and Zelda, until next year. But at the same time there are lots of awesome games coming out,” he concludes.

“We’re really positive about the coming year. The industry is really healthy and are looking forward to E3. We’re looking forward to lots of stuff coming out. “

GAMESTOP international EVP and president Mike Mauler says that the industry has been too quick to abandon the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.

“They have tremendous install bases, and – except for a few major titles like FIFA and Call of Duty – everything is about the new machines,” he says. “There are still a lot of consumers out there that still have the older generation platforms.”

He continues: “Our used business is growing this year as there are fewer new titles for the old gen. If you have a PS3 or 360, you are prone to buying a lot of used games that you haven’t played before.”

‘DON’T ABANDON THE XBOX 360’

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 2015

MIKE MAULER, GAMESTOP INTERVIEW

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Back in 1995, a handful of gaming giants united to create the global trade

show E3. At the heart of its creation was

Sega, which had run a number of events in the years prior.

So it was very much the end of an era when Sega announced it wouldn’t have its own booth at E3 this year.

“You go to E3 to show products,” explains Sega Europe’s SVP of commercial publishing. John Clark.

“Some people have been saying: ‘it’s a shame that Sega isn’t showing anything at E3, but I went to the stand last year and there was nothing to look at’.

“We don’t have a huge array of games coming out that are relevant to E3 this year. We have made the brave decision, and certain press may pick up on that. We’re focusing on our content roadmap, and it’s strong going forward. It’s just not aligned to E3 this year.”

PC FOCUS E3 has been heavily linked to the console world. Sega’s heritage is in consoles, of course, but in recent years this has switched to PC, with the likes of Total War, Alien, Company and Heroes and Football Manager. The latter of which is approaching 10m sales on PC.

“We have always viewed PC as a core part of our business,” Clark says. “For us, the PC market is about franchise, and franchise development. So to have four really strong PC IP is incredible. We have enjoyed working hard with the studios to benefit from the growth of Steam, as well as

the growing number of consumers who are buying PCs.

“The market has grown, but it’s not a market we can lay figures on. If you had to look across the share of a multi-format game, like Alien Isolation, you’d be really surprised with the size of the PC contribution. In the same breath we can talk about PC with PS4 and Xbox One.”

Of course, PC is a heavily digital market. But unlike other PC specialists, Sega still values physical retail.

“Our role within the games ecosystem is making sure consumers can access content wherever they want to, however they want to,” Clark insists. “Physical retail plays an important role in that.

“Retail has made a point of saying that physical PC is still relevant, and retail is still relevant in the PC market. As long as retail is supporting PC, we’ll be supporting retail.

“There are certainly unique selling points to the High Street channel that you don’t get online. This

includes the ability for people to pay with cash, earn loyalty points, and trade-in games. These are unique points that only the High Street can offer. So it’s important we keep talking to and working with retail.”

NEW IDEASSega is rightly proud of the strong sales in its Alien, Total War and Football Manager franchises. But what about some new concepts?

“New IP has been a challenge for everybody for the last ten years,” Clark explains. “The success that people have had is from franchises that have been built up over time that require a lot of investment. And Sega is no different.

“We’ll dip our toe in the water and look at new IP, like [Game Freak’s upcoming title] Tembo The Badass Elephant. But we are looking to broaden our offering as well, whether that’s through Sega creating its own idea, or looking at what projects are being created externally with other studios. We are actively looking at new studios and projects. If the opportunity is there we’ll certainly support it.”

He continues: “Launching new IP is hard. Consumers are buying games and spending more time with them, so it’s difficult to break in with a new IP. It’s been a long time since it’s been easy to launch a new game. People aren’t buying two new titles and moving on, they’re buying a game and playing it for a year, playing multiplayer, and purchasing extra content.

“The length of the gameplay has been extended. There isn’t the same scale of purchase opportunities that there were five years ago.”

Console showstopper to PC powerhouse

For the first time ever, Sega, one of E3’s founding fathers, is giving the LA expo a miss – but why? Alex Calvin speaks to SVP of commercial publishing, John Clark, about the LA trade show, the PC

games market and the difficulties of launching new IP

New IP is a challenge for everyone. People are playing games for longer, so it’s harder to get attention.

John Clark, Sega

Sports Interactive’s Football Manager is approaching 10 million sales on PC

JOHN CLARK, SEGA INTERVIEW

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 201517

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INSIGHT

It would be a brave person to argue that the rate of change in our industry is pedestrian.

What is perhaps often overlooked, however, is the rate of change in the marketing paradigm.

Even the word ‘paradigm’, with its connotations of long-established principles and slowly evolving trends, doesn’t really apply in today’s marketing world. The pace of change in marketing and communications is as fast as it is in all other aspects of our industry – arguably the fastest – and it is accelerating. It takes a concerted effort and focus to keep up with best practices.

Of course, the era of outbound marketing display advertising is over 100 years old, pre-dating even the famed Mad Men of the 1950s. In the early-to-mid noughties, outbound marketing moved into the digital space, but it was still very disruptive and display-orientated in nature, and, for about 20 years, quite dependable.

Even the move to inbound marketing and the social media paradigm (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and so on) of the last five to ten years now seems like a reassuringly constant landscape for the modern marketer to ply his or her trade, relative to the here-and-now that is. So much so that I’ve come to dismiss any marketing hypothesis or white paper that is anything more than six to 12 months old.

In the paid and earned media spaces, in particular, barely a week goes by without a new theory about the best practice for search, programmatic, biddable and so on, plus which key performance indicators (KPIs) are meaningful and which are not. It’s a maelstrom of marketing theorems.

SPOTTING THE TRENDSAs is by now well-documented, the overarching trend is towards inbound marketing and content delivery where the consumer self-selects to engage with brands, products and services rather than brands interrupting through outbound messaging. It is the world of search, of social, of sharing. But within this sub-segment the ‘rules of engagement’ are still be debated, as concepts and theories are stress-tested in real-world case studies.

The skill is in recognising the longer-lasting trends – the ones that are not just flashes in the marcomms pan, but those that will have staying power: those that have a proven Darwinian

We live in an age of analytics where ‘marketing technology’ is rising up as the one trend to rule them all.

Tim Woodley, 505 Games

The new age of advertising

505 Games’ SVP of global brand TIM WOODLEY, a former marketing boss at Activision and Codemasters, shares his experiences with the rapidly changing landscape for video games promotion

resilience through robust, reliable and repeatable KPIs.

In amongst this confusion is the reassuring truth that the consumer is still at the centre of everything. Outbound display advertising died out largely because it is, by its very nature, more product-focused than consumer-focused. Inbound marketing is currently the ‘fittest’ in the Darwinian analogy because it forces us to return the consumer to the centre of all we do.

Additionally, we have spent an inordinate amount of time in bygone eras focusing on acquisition marketing, obsessing over the number of new users we’re reaching. Now, it’s about engagement and lifetime value of existing users. We acquire to retain. We retain to monetise. Free-to-play, subscription MMOs and the macro-trend towards games as services has brought terms like ‘retention’, ‘churn’ and ‘monthly active users’ to the front of mind in our world, but such terminology is permeating the entire marketing lexicon – regardless of sector.

The irony is that ‘retention’ has much more to with content management through owned media – websites, social channels and so on – than it does ‘paid’ or ‘earned’ media, which is broadly the domain of customer acquisition.

Fortunately we live in an age of analytics where ‘marketing technology’ is rising up as the one trend to rule them all. Content management systems, CRM and analytics can not only tell us everything we need to know about consumer make-up and behaviours, but can also give us real-time answers to the questions being posed by the marketing theorists and help us validate or otherwise.

INSIGHT

Outbound advertising such as this is becoming less popular with marketers

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“The successful freemium game is based on five principles,” says Canada’s

minister of mobile gaming. “Entice the player with a simple game loop. Use lots of flashing ch-chings and compliments to make the player feel good about themselves. Train the players to spend your fake currency. Offer them a way to spend real currency for your fake currency – so they will forget they are spending money. And make the game about waiting, but let the player pay not to wait. It is a sure-fire way to make lots of money.”

“We understand micropaying,” replies the comedian Phillip. “But can’t the game hidden inside the charade at least be fun?”

“No, it has to be just barely fun,” answers the minister. “If the game was too fun there would be no need to micropay in order to make it more fun.”

This is an exchange from the South Park episode ‘Freemium Isn’t Free,’ which aired last November. It was the latest in a string of attacks on free-to-play, where developers have been accused of utilising underhand tactics to extort money from unsuspecting players.

In fact, even some of these developers have their issues with the business model.

“Certain elements of free-to-play games are comparable with casinos,” says Playrise Digital’s Nick Burcombe, who created free-to-play mobile game Table Top Racing.

“Firstly, get them through the door for free. In casinos, they want you to forget about the realities, so there’s free booze and attractive people serving drinks, which always loosens up the wallet. Then they establish an understanding

of the ‘in-game economy’, push players towards a purchase, figure out who the big spenders are and then put the ‘menu of value’ on the table. In casinos, this is the ‘comps’ system: free drinks, food, rooms, show tickets, helicopter rides, whatever you desire, as long as you keep spending – the more you spend the more they will comp you.

“It’s the same for games, and the reason people feel it’s unfair is that you instinctively get a sense that this model is just there to exploit you.”

He adds: “Effectively you’re being ‘gamed’, and getting money out of you is a metrics-driven science.”

‘‘-MIUM’ IS LATIN FOR ‘NOT REALLY’Of course, free-to-play was not born as a cynical ploy to pick pockets.

“It is a response to the changes wrought by digital: ridiculously cheap file distribution, unlimited shelf space, fewer gatekeepers and virtually unlimited consumer choice,” says Nicholas Lovell, analyst and free-to-play consultant.

“All of this led to a situation where free was inevitable, driven not by piracy but by competition for the most valuable

thing in a digital economy: consumer attention.

“F2P also introduced a whole new audience to games. Players who don’t get Dark Souls, or even Hearthstone, but for whom Candy Crush Saga, or Kim Kardashian: Hollywood are absorbing, entertaining pastimes.

“There have been negatives. The first rush of ‘my kid spent £1,000 on virtual currency’ has passed as parental controls and understanding improve. There will always be these stories, because they make good headlines, but anyone who thinks that F2P is ripping off children who don’t understand what they are doing is deluded and in for a big disappointment when the model doesn’t disappear.”

Indeed, consumers have voted, and they want free games.

“They overwhelmingly want free-to-play,” says Lee Cummings, creative director of free mobile game Doctor Who Legacy. “Publishers know that if they charge a price – any price – the installs will drop dramatically. This has created a very difficult paradox, because consumers have become accustomed to free games – yet, of course, they aren’t free to make.”

‘IT HAS TO BE JUST BARELY FUN’ For all the criticisms, free-to-play is popular, and the model has its benefits; independent developers can now make huge amounts of money without the need for a big publisher, while consumers can essentially try before they buy.

But what about the accusations that have been levelled by South Park and the ilk? That too many

Everybody hates free-to-play

Or do they? One of the most popular ways of paying for games is under constant scrutiny from the media and core consumers. So what can be done about free-to-play’s negative image? Christopher Dring asks the experts

Free-to-play has seen flak from both within the industry and outside – even coming under fire in South Park

Above: Lee (top) and Susan (bottom) Cummings say that free-to-play should entice players by establishing real value

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 2015

FIXING FREE-TO-PLAY

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Game of War’s adverts starring Kate Upton reinforce the negative perception of free-to-play, says Lovell

If people want to buy a virtual doughnut for 69p, who am I to argue?

Nick Burcombe, Playrise Digital

free-to-play games are just ‘barely fun’ and utilise cynical tricks to persuade players to spend?

“If you forget to delight your players and rely on a playbook of monetisation techniques, eventually they’ll get bored and play the games of someone who doesn’t treat them as numbers in a vast, metrics-driven database,” says Lovell.

“There are many things that still disappoint me about free-to-play games. The Kate Upton adverts for Game of War are an embarrassment to our industry. I’m saddened by how little distance we have come in our marketing techniques or our portrayal of women.

“I am also saddened by the number of triple-A developers who shove timers, energy gates and aggressive monetisation into well-loved franchises with little understanding of the fundamental principles of good F2P design.

“The lack of understanding, love and respect for the players shows through and means these games are unlikely to work.”

FIXING FREESo what can be done to turn around free-to-play’s perception problem?

“I’d like to see a change in mobile where if you put more money in, you get more fun out,” answers Burcombe. “So you’re not constantly being asked to spend small amounts on short-term power-ups, or worse still, spending money that reduces your waiting time... that’s where I have a moral issue with some of the free-to- play mechanics.

“I’m keenly aware that the public vote with their wallets and, regardless of my wishes, the prevalent model will win out. If people are happy to spend 69p for a virtual doughnut that doesn’t get them anywhere – then who am I to argue?”

Susan Cummings, executive producer on Doctor Who Legacy, agrees: “As an industry, we need to stop making consumers feel that they’re being duped - start offering real value so that they don’t feel bad about spending money. Yes, there is clearly a lot of money to be made in pay walls and tricks – but morally, is this really what we want our industry to become?”

She continues: “Perhaps gamers need to become re-accustomed to the fact that games cost

money to make. Most free games have fewer than five per cent of players spending. That is the reason for so much focus on tuning monetisation.”

This is the conflict at the heart of free-to-play. These games cannot be free. Developers need to be paid. And if the monetisation is too generous, no one will spend – if it’s too aggressive, it spoils the experience. It’s a tough balancing act to pull off.

Some have got it right (take Blizzard’s Hearthstone or Valve’s Dota 2 as ideal examples of the model), but these are offset by the high-profile failures.

The hope is that developers can learn from these errors, so that the controversial business model can shrug off its PR problems and live up to the potential its advocates insist it has.

“I am extremely optimistic,” concludes Lovell. “We’re reaching more players than ever. The new business model has enabled many more studios to exist. We are learning to let those who love what we do to spend lots of money on things they really value. We are in an explosion of new studios making new content. Long may it continue.”

Playrise’s Burcombe (below) and analyst Lovell (bottom)

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com22

FIXING FREE-TO-PLAY

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It seems that Pac-Man is celebrating his birthday in style.

2015 marks the 35th anniversary of Bandai Namco’s spherical superstar, and the publisher has kicked off the year by rocketing to the top of the UK charts.

Nearly a quarter of all boxed games sold in May were Bandai Namco titles, according to GfK Chart-Track, with the firm scooping a massive 36.6 per cent of software market revenue during the period.

This was thanks to two hit games in particular – The Witcher 3 and Project CARS – which were received feverishly by critics and consumers alike.

Launched on May 8th, Project CARS made records by becoming the first four-wheeled racing sim to top the charts since Codemasters’ GRID 2 in 2013. It also showed the gold-paved road ahead for Bandai Namco after the game claimed a second weekly number one, becoming the publisher’s first consecutive chart-topper since Ridge Racer 4 16 years earlier. Three weeks later, it’s now sold more than one million units worldwide.

Project CARS’ success was soon proved to be far from a fluke, as it was replaced at the top of the charts by Bandai Namco’s next title, The Witcher 3, launched on May 19th. The epic RPG’s sell-through rate smashed that of the other big 2015 hit Battlefield Hardline by 53 per cent, making it the biggest launch of the year so far.

These are indicators of the year ahead for Bandai Namco, says PR and marketing director Lee Kirton.

“We have seen some incredible success with Project CARS, The

Witcher 3: Wild Hunt and Dragon Ball Xenoverse, and have F1 2015 just around the corner,” he observes. “Alongside these, we have some very important franchises including One Piece, J-Stars, Project X Zone 2, Naruto, Godzilla, Saint Seiya and Tales of Zesteria, plus a great family range to be announced.”

WORTH THE WAITNeither The Witcher 3 nor Project CARS were originally slated for release this year. Both were initially announced with 2014 launch dates, before experiencing multiple pushbacks to eventually land in May.

Kirton states determinedly that the delays were necessary in order to ensure the games’ quality upon release – a tactic that certainly seems to have paid dividends.

“The time taken in constructing something great needs to be taken into consideration and we obviously witnessed some slippage purely down to not

wanting to deliver an unfinished title,” he explains.

“Of course, games will always have updates and patches. However, this should be taken as a positive approach to supporting games after launch and continuing to make them better and add content.”

FAN SERVICEBeing open with players has been a focus for both The Witcher 3 and Project CARS. CD Projekt Red responded to accusations of a graphical downgrade in The Witcher 3 shortly after launch, allaying fans’ worries and outlining upcoming patches and fixes to the title. Project CARS, meanwhile, was originally crowdfunded by backers on Kickstarter before being picked up by Bandai Namco, meaning players could follow the title’s creation and offer input early on.

“Rather than developing a game and just releasing it as a studio would, the involvement of fans from day one was incredibly important in development and communication,” recalls Kirton.

“We’ve been saying in our communication that Project CARS was built for the future, a lot like Bungie’s Destiny. Seeing the involvement of passionate fans interacting with the studio and us has been inspiring. It’s been a major effort. It was a unique fit and something we

could focus on as an important title for all of us.

“All games should be developed with fans from the get-go. It shows in the delivery of what gamers want. We are very proud of the title and it’s only just the start.”

Bandai on the runBandai Namco made history in May, becoming the UK’s biggest publisher for the first time since its inception.

PR and marketing director Lee Kirton tells Matthew Jarvis how the firm plans to stay on top

Dragon Ball Xenoverse has shipped more than 1.5m units

Project CARS was built for the future, a lot like Bungie’s Destiny.

Lee Kirton, Bandai Namco

24June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com

INTERVIEW BANDAI NAMCO

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The Witcher 3 is the biggest game launch of 2015 to date

BANDAI Namco’s iconic mascot Pac-Man is set to make his big screen appearance this summer, starring in the upcoming video game-based comedy Pixels alongside Adam Sandler, Game of Thrones’ Peter Dinklage and Frozen’s Josh Gad.

Lee Kirton, PR and marketing director at Bandai Namco Entertainment UK, talks about what the publisher has in store around the cinematic release.

“We recently announced Pac-Man’s 35th anniversary and he is featured in the trailers for Pixels from Sony Pictures. We have been doing a lot with Pac-Man over the last few years and have an incredible new game coming out for mobile called Pac-Man 256, created in

partnership with Hipster Whale, the makers of Crossy Road.

“We have always been developing strong titles on mobile and have recently seen incredible success with the likes of Pac-Man and Tekken Card Tournament. We have specific teams and good relationships in place to develop great titles based on our IPs, as well as to bring original IP to this huge market.

“We have a number of other activities happening; Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures is still performing well on Disney XD in the UK and Netflix, plus there are new games coming, as well as licensed goods. We also have stunts and campaigns in place.”

PIXELS POWER

HEADED WESTProject CARS is a creation of British developer Slightly Mad Studios, while The Witcher harks from Polish outlet CD Projekt Red. But much of Bandai Namco’s legacy still lies in its Japanese roots.

“We have been developing and working on successful Japanese licences from the very beginning,” Kirton details. “These are hugely successful in the Asian market and we have been bringing them to the West. We made a promise to fans years ago that we would deliver these titles in Europe.

“We put the effort in with localisation and exclusive collector editions and collectible goods to offer something truly unique. We have structured teams that focus

on our different titles and IP and offer something completely unique across a broad range of audiences, and this is something we excel in.”

Bandai Namco’s latest Japanese title to succeed in the West is Dragon Ball Xenoverse. The game debuted in third place in GfK Chart-Track’s weekly rankings, topped the global Steam charts and has now shipped over 1.5 million units.

“Interest in Japanese titles has evolved over the years and is something that is stronger in some territories than others,” continues Kirton. “Some regions grow up with anime and some do not – however, there is a substantial fan base across the whole of Europe.

“We have an incredibly strong fan base in the UK and see fantastic

sales on some IPs and good sales on others. We are aware of our popular franchises and manage titles effectively to deliver them all in a box on the shelf or through digital distribution. This is something that will continue to benefit us in a big way, as gamers have a continuous choice to buy a special collector edition or just download the game.

“We wanted to make all of our IPs available for everyone and we have done this. This is only going to get stronger through our overall ‘entertainment focus’ as a company, with different ways to provide anime content that fans want to see.”

WHAT LIES AHEAD2015 has already laid the foundations for a stellar year for Bandai Namco.

Kirton reveals how the company is preparing to keep up the pace going forwards.

“We have strengthened our teams internally, which are made up of passionate people who treat every title as if it was developed internally,” he explains. “We have strengthened our operations globally and we still provide the biggest territorial network with strong marketing, PR, publishing and distribution.

“We will continue to focus on our titles, our strong IP, our third party relationships, supporting our titles long term and our new role in not just gaming but overall entertainment.

“We have a clear vision as a company and we also have passionate goals in what we want to achieve and we are aiming high.”

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 2015

BANDAI NAMCO INTERVIEW

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“Great games take time and we’re committed to delivering the highest quality entertainment experiences in our industry, which translate into stronger revenues. Sometimes, that can take longer than expected, but we believe that delaying a release to make it the best it can be is ultimately in the best

interests of our business. Despite our aim, we’re not always perfect. I do think that we’ve gotten a lot better; however, we don’t take delays lightly. We prefer to take more time, get it right and enjoy success in the market by creating durable brands that delight consumers for many years to follow.”

“The decline in the number of kids games was due in part to the proliferation of smartphones and tablets, that support free-to-play games that tend to be far more casual experiences. This console cycle is still somewhat new and largely comprised of early adopters who are older core gamers - today, the average player is 35. We aim to entertain the largest audience possible and

that currently skews older on new-gen. The new consoles absolutely have an opportunity to attract a younger audience and it remains to be seen what types of experiences will grow in that segment. Historically, the majority of titles for young gamers were based on film or TV properties and that proved to be quite costly for some publishers – in some instances, fatal.”

“Our industry has experienced some consolidation over the past few years; however, for the time being, it seems to be at the right size. Having fewer titles, albeit of higher quality, is a good thing for our

industry and retail partners. Consumers are understandably discerning with their dollars and companies that selectively release titles have a greater opportunity to reach audiences and build long-term franchises.”

“The percentage of sales through digital distribution is increasing and will continue to grow as consumer preference moves in that direction and the new-gen consoles and other technologies enable faster and more efficient download of titles. Many retailers have taken important steps to embrace digital distribution and are

capitalising on that paradigm shift. While I don’t envision a complete change to digital distribution in the near-term, I do think that retailers will be far better prepared to grow with our industry during this phase than they were during the comparable periods in the evolution of the music and book publishing industries.”

“Patent reform is a current challenge for our industry. We have a proven track record of delivering innovative, leading-edge products and services that engage and entertain consumers across a variety of platforms. Disturbingly, however, costly lawsuits brought to extort unjust settlements from companies in our business undercut their ability to invest fully in innovation. There is a significant need for stricter reform, including financial penalties, to help thwart meritless patent suits.”

“Our teams continually evaluate all new forms of technology to see how they can best be leveraged. We will not be the first ones over the wall with content for VR. Our approach is to be highly mindful of the market opportunity and invest accordingly. It’s not about these technologies and what they do – it’s about how the consumer chooses to embrace them. We’re in business for consumers, so we’ll be there if VR becomes a meaningful way to deepen engagement with our properties.”

...ON GAME BUGS AND BROKEN TITLES

...ON THE FUTURE OF CONSOLE KIDS GAMES

...ON THE DECLINE IN TRIPLE-A GAMES

...ON WHERE GAMES RETAIL IS HEADED

...ON PATENTS...ON VR

XXX XXX

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com0026

STRAUSS ZELNICK ON THE INDUSTRY

The world according to Strauss ZelnickThe Take-Two CEO and ESA chairman discusses the latest challenges and

developments impacting the global games market

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b:ww.venomuk.comone:

Email:darren scott@venomuk com

Venom UK Gaming

SERIOUSABOUT

ACCESSORIES

SERIOUSABOUT

GAMING

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MARKET MOVES

EXERTIS | Distribution veteran JON ATHERTON has joined Exertis.

He moves to the company as commercial development director and will be based at the firm’s office in Basingstoke.

Atherton arrives with 20 years of distribution experience; he was previously director and vice president at technology distributor Entatech.

“Exertis is shaping distribution in line with the changes we’re seeing throughout the IT industry to better reflect the needs of its reseller partners,” Atherton said.

“I am excited about this move because it will bring fresh and exciting challenges.”

Exertis B2B director PHIL BROWN added: “Jon brings a wealth of experience to his role at Exertis at a time when the company’s momentum and appetite for growth shows no sign of slowing down. I am confident that with his skills, knowledge and contacts, Jon will help Exertis make serious in-roads into the new opportunities in the channel.”

UPPER STREET EVENTS | The company behind Legends of Gaming has bolstered its sales and marketing team.

LEE HUNT joins as senior sales executive from

GAME where he was an event strategist. Hunt joined the retailer in 2006 as a store manager, rising to district development manager before being promoted to local marketing manager in 2012.

“I’m really excited to be joining Upper Street on the other side of the events business,” he said.

“With the event being a new and unique proposition, I am looking forward to working with it as it evolves.”

Meanwhile, STEFANIE GRIME has been promoted to marketing manager. Grime has worked as a senior marketing executive at Upper Street on its Gadget Show Live brand since 2012.

“I am really excited to be working on an event that centres

on the new phenomenon of YouTube celebrities,” Grime said. “It’s something totally new in the industry and will enable us to use some really current marketing techniques and ideas to speak to our audience.”

FUTURE | The media firm has hired a new journalist for Official Xbox Magazine.

TOM STONE comes on board as staff writer.

“We are excited to welcome Tom to Team OXM,” deputy editor ALEX DALE said. “Tom has a fresh, engaging and versatile writing voice that makes him perfectly suited to the unique challenges of this role.”

Distribution vet Jon Atherton joins Exertis Former Entatech boss moves to fi rm Legends of Gaming team bolstered New staff writer for OXM

APPOINTMENTS

POKÉMON | A new attraction that lets kids create animated movies based on the hit games brand is coming to London.

The Pokémon Animation Studio will be part of KidZania, a 75,000 square foot ‘child-sized city’. It will open in Westfield on June 25th.

GAMESTOP | The global retail giant has purchased Think Geek parent firm GeekNet.

GameStop acquired all of the firm’s $20 per share common stock. GeekNet was valued at $140m in the deal, with GameStop believing the acquisition will boost its annual net sales by more than $100m and operating earnings by 20 per cent.

“This acquisition creates value for all stakeholders involved,” GameStop CEO Paul Raines said. “The addition of GeekNet is an important

expansion of our global multichannel platform and we are excited to leverage their product development expertise to broaden our product offering in the fast-growing collectibles category and deepen relationships with our existing customer base.”

GeekNet CEO Kathryn McCarthy added: “As a part of GameStop’s family of brands, Geeknet will be well-positioned to achieve our goals of increasing our brand awareness and expanding our product offerings.”

SOFTBANK | The Japanese telecoms giant has increased its stake in Finnish mobile games firm Supercell.

Softbank has upped its stake by 22.7 per cent to 73.2 per cent.

The firm purchased a 51 per cent stake in Supercell in October 2013, paying $1.5bn.

AROUND THE INDUSTRY

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www.mcvuk.com June 12th 201529

EDITORIAL CONTACTS

EDITORIAL CONTACTS

Production Executive: Elizabeth [email protected]

Head of Operations: Stuart Moody [email protected]

Circulation: Lianne [email protected]

Finance Manager: Michael Canham [email protected]

Head of Design and Production:Kelly [email protected]

US CorrespondentErik [email protected]

THE RETAIL ADVISORY BOARD

MCV has an exclusive media partnership with Famitsu – Japan’s leading video

games analyst and news source

ISSN: 1469-4832

Copyright 2015

Please address all enquiries to:Newbay Media, MCV, Saxon House, 6a St. Andrew Street, Hertford, SG14 1JA.

Printed By: Pensord, Tram Road, Pontllanfraith,Blackwood, NP12 2YA

Newbay Media specialises in trade-dedicated print and digital publishing for entertainment and leisure markets. As well as MCV, Newbay publishes Develop, PCR, ToyNews, Music Week, MI Pro, Audio Pro International and BikeBiz. It also has two online-only brands: Mobile Entertainment, dedicated to the growing mass market smartphone sector, and Licensing.biz, for everyone in the global licensing industry. It also runs a number of events including the MCV Industry Excellence Awards, the London Games Conference and the Games Media Awards.

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© Newbay Media 2015All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval system without the express prior written consent of the publisher. The contents of MCV are subject to reproduction in information storage and retrieval systems.

MCV is a member of the Periodical Publishers Association. For the 12 months ending December 2009, MCV had an average weekly net circulation of 8,045. MCV’s circulation is 100 per cent named and zero per cent duplicated.

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS United Kingdom £150 l Europe £175 l Rest of the World £250To order your subscription via Visa, Mastercard, Switch or AMEX or to make changes to your subscription details, contact [email protected] or call 01580 883848.

Editorial: 01992 515303 | Advertising: 01992 535647 | Fax: 01992 535648

Ben Parfi tt Associate Editorbparfi [email protected]

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Michael [email protected]

Sam Richwood [email protected]

Laura WestBusiness Development [email protected]

Conor Tallon Account [email protected]

MCV takes soundings from its Retail Advisory Board on the biggest issues in the industry. The current members are...

Charlotte Knight GAME

Steve Moore Simply Games

Jon Hayes Tesco

Sarah Jasper The Hut

Phil Moore Grainger Games

Igor Cipolletta ShopTo

Dermot Stapleton Get Games

Niall Lawlor GameStop

Phil Browes HMV

Craig Watson Dixons Retail

Jennifer JohnsonShop Direct

Don McCabe CHIPS

Gurdeep Hunjan Sainsbury’s

Simon Urquhart Microsoft

Robert Lindsay Games Centre

Stephen Staley Gameseek

Robert Hennessy John Lewis

Paul Sulyok Green Man Gaming

James Cooke Argos

Christopher Dring [email protected]

Alex Calvin Staff [email protected]

Page 30: MCV837 June 12th

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Page 32: MCV837 June 12th

Steve Stopps was bored. The project director and his

team were between games at the work-for-hire developer Blitz Games Studio. So Stopps and a rag-tag group of developers decided to try their hand at making the firm’s first mobile game.

“We were asked to make a little mobile test project. But rather than making that, we decided to make the best mobile game we could in eight weeks,” Stopps says.

“That turned out to be Kumo Lumo. Our directors weren’t keen on it, but they were going out to GDC, showed it to Chillingo who loved it. It published it, the game went on to be the App Store’s Editor’s Choice in 60-odd countries and won MacWorld Game of the Year.”

So, its first title was a success, as was its second, Paper Titans. But shortly after, Blitz went under, and Stopps and the core team – internally referred to as Team Lumo – left to set up their own venture, under that name.

“We decided to come up with another game concept, take it out to investors and see about getting some funding,” Stopps says. “That ended up being Lumo Deliveries, which we launched last October. That was our first project as a team outside of Blitz.”

MOBILE RISKSSince going indie, the team has stuck to its mobile guns.

“For us, we just like the experiences of mobile games,” Stopps explains. “They suit what we like developing. We quite enjoy working on whimsical games. That comes from the desire to make visually-interesting and beautiful

games that use bright vibrant colours. Mobile seems to embrace that kind of stuff much more willingly than console does. A lot of the audience is quite fresh and new, they don’t come with a lot of the baggage of more traditional-style games. They have embraced new styles of game play.

“And as you get older, the amount of time you have to sit in front of a console and invest hours and hours in games diminishes. We tend to find we’re playing in shorter sessions, so we started gaming on mobile. Therefore, they end up being the kind of games we make.”

And now the firm is set on working on its own IP, and is no longer interested in doing projects for anyone else.

“We don’t do work-for-hire anymore,” Stopps insists. “In fact, I’ve turned down a lot of those projects. We only want to work on our own IP. It’s what we do. It’s a very different experience. I loved being at a work-for-hire studio, you’re working on really tight margins and on projects where the profit

margins can disappear overnight if you make one mistake.

“It’s an amazing way of sharpening up your production skills and the teams who are creating really good, fun games – often in tight time scales – do amazing work. That usually goes unrecognised. But what we enjoy doing and the thing that gets us up in the morning is working on our own games.”

In addition to going indie, Stopps is also publishing games under his Kumotion brand.

“Blitz wanted to go back into work-for-hire projects. It didn’t want to do its own IP and that’s where my heart was, so I decided I was going to leave and try and work out how to do that,” Stopps says.

“Meanwhile, Blitz gave permission to its employees that they could make their own games in their own time and then release them. The original prototype for Mike Bithell’s Thomas was Alone was developed at Blitz and was released while he was still there. When I left, some of my friends were working on Pocket Titans, and were struggling to get press coverage. So they turned to me to get the word out. That was the first game I published.

“The process of telling people how to create a game and build an audience for a game is really tough. The fact I have been through the publishing process myself has helped a lot with my work at Team Lumo. I also help indies out with the production side of things, which often gets overlooked. Polishing games comes from good project management.

“It’s not my main focus – but people ask for help sometimes, because it’s really hard work getting exposure for indie games.”

Team Lumo’s mobile journey

Formed from the ashes of Leamington Spa-based work-for-hire studio Blitz Games, Team Lumo is now working on its own IP. Alex Calvin speaks to director Steve Stopps

A lot of the mobile games audience are new. They don’t come with the baggage of more traditional titles.

Steve Stopps, Team Lumo

Lumo’s Cat is Team Lumo’s fourth game and its third free-to-play title

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com32

INDIE INTERVIEW STEVE STOPPSSponsored by

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June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com34

MARKETPLACE

How has business been? Steady. Not spectacular, but steady. There just hasn’t been anything huge coming out. We have a lot of stuff planned for the new Batman game. The Witcher 3 was successful, I suppose, but it’s been a slow type of year.

What else has been selling well? Bloodborne did pretty well. That was a bit of a surprise. Mortal Kombat X did better than we thought, too. We’ve had to keep

restocking Mortal Kombat. Project CARS is also seeing interest – sales have picked up since launch. But overall it’s just been a rather quiet time of the year.

How has your hardware been selling? Consoles remain steady, thanks to the new price points. The Xbox One has been ticking over, and it’s just come down in price. The bundle deals from Exertis have been well-received – there was

one with Halo: The Master Chief Collection and another with Forza Horizon 2. But the PS4 has been doing much better. CentreSoft has been really good with packs. Exertis do packs, but they’re the standard Microsoft ones. CentreSoft seems to put loads of diff erent packs together.

What are you doing for Batman Arkham Knight? Warner Bros is giving us some money to promote it. We have

MCV speaks to Steven Doyle of Game Dojo about the surprise success of Mortal Kombat X and the support the Lytham St Annes store has been receiving from Warner Bros ahead of the launch of Batman Arkham Knight

SHELF LIFE

TOP 10 PRE-ORDERS

PRE-ORDER CHARTS

1. ELDER SCROLLS ONLINE: TAMRIEL UNLIMITED + EXPLORER PACKBethesda, PS4

2. Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited + DLCBethesda ......................................................................XO

3. Batman Arkham Knight Day 1 + Harley Quinn DLCWarner Bros ............................................................PS4

4. Batman Arkham Knight Day 1 + Harley Quinn DLCWarner Bros ...............................................................XO

5. Amiibo Pikmin and OlimarNintendo .................................................................Wii U 6. Amiibo Dr MarioNintendo .................................................................Wii U 7. Amiibo Bowser JrNintendo .................................................................Wii U

8. Until Dawn – Extended EditionSony .............................................................................PS4

9. LEGO Jurassic World + DLCWarner Bros ......................................................... PS4

10. Yoshi’s Woolly World + Green Yarn Yoshi AmiiboNintendo .................................................................Wii U

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THE SWAPPER

Curve Digital’s philosophical platformer has fi nally hit Xbox One

The horror game from Amnesia studio Frictional Games is set for PS4 and PC

This shoot-em-up has made its console debut on Wii U

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www.mcvuk.com June 12th 201535

MARKETPLACE

loads of POS from CentreSoft already, like big posters. But Warner Bros seems to be backing Sony a bit more, due to stuff like the exclusive content on PS4. Because of the budget we are attempting to change our store sign to be Batman-themed; we’re trying to see if Warner can do it for us.

Do you want a similar level of support from other publishers going forwards?

Defi nitely. Normally we get stuff from Sony, because each time they have a big game out they send someone down to help out. CentreSoft will put us in for whatever off ers they have going on. We were one of fi ve shops that had a Bloodborne night run by them. There were fi ve PS4 pods in our store courtesy of our PlayStation rep about a week before the game came out. Batman is the fi rst time a third party has helped us out like this.

WANT TO FEATURE YOUR OUTLET IN MCV?Contact [email protected] or call 01992 515 303

Game Dojo21 The Crescent,Lytham St Annes,Lancashire,FY8 1SZ

Phone: 01253 789 922Website: game-dojo.co.ukFacebook: /gamedojoTwitter: @GameDojoUK

INCOMING With The Elder Scrolls Online, LEGO Jurassic World and Batman Arkham Knight on the way in June, the summer of games is starting to heat up

TITLE FORMAT GENRE PUBLISHER TELEPHONE DISTRIBUTOR

June 6th

Mortal Kombat X PS3/360 Fighting Warner Bros 01216 253 388 CentreSoft

June 9th

The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited PS4/XO RPG Bethesda 01215 069 590 Advantage

June 12th

LEGO Jurassic World PS4/XO/Wii U/PS3/360/PC Action Warner Bros 01216 253 388 CentreSoft

June 15th

Rory McIlroy PGA Tour PS4/XO Sports EA 01216 253 388 CentreSoft

June 19th

Car Mechanic Simulator 2015 PC Simulation Ravenscourt 01256 385 200 Koch Media

Construction Machines Simulator 2016 PC Simulation Ravenscourt 01256 385 200 Koch Media

Tour de France 2015 PS4/XO/PS3 Sports Deep Silver 01256 385 200 Koch Media

June 23rd

Batman: Arkham Knight PS4/XO/PC Action Warner Bros 01216 253 388 CentreSoft

Final Fantasy XIV: Heavensward PS4/PC MMO Square Enix 01216 253 388 CentreSoft

June 26th

Art Academy: Atelier Wii U Kids Nintendo 01753 483 700 Open

J-Stars Victory VS+ PS4/PS3/Vita RPG Bandai Namco 01215 069 590 Advantage

Top Trumps Turbo PS3/3DS/Vita/PC Party Funbox Media 01246 810623 Open

Yoshi’s Woolly World Wii U Platformer Nintendo 01753 483 700 Open

July 10th

F1 2015 PS4/XO/PC Racing Bandai Namco 01215 069 590 Advantage

Page 36: MCV837 June 12th

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com36

CONSOLES

The PS4 is outpacing its predecessors’ sales, meaning it could be set to make home console history.

IT’S often said that PC is the grandfather of the games industry, but the humble home console has a legacy that now stretches back over more than three decades.

Since its inception, E3 has served as the year’s biggest celebration of consoles. While PC and mobile have a presence – increasingly, given the first-ever PC Gaming Show at the event this year – it’s PlayStation, Xbox and Nintendo that rule the roost.

This is despite mobile beating back the sector in the wider market; research firm Newzoo estimates that 2015 will see console market share in the UK fall below 50 per cent for the first time in history, dropping to 48 per cent from 51 per cent last year. However, annual revenue for the consoles will actually increase by 1.1 per cent versus 2014.

The best-selling console of all time remains the PlayStation 2. Launched in 2000, the machine

PLAYSTATION NEW SCHOOL MEN’S T-SHIRT

Placing the distinctive design of the PS4’s DualShock 4 controller front and centre, this minimalist monochromatic shirt also displays the iconic Triangle, Square, Circle and Cross logos of the PlayStation control scheme, alongside the PlayStation logo.

SRP: £17.99Manufacturer: SonyDistributor: SonyContact: gear.playstation.com

E3 is traditionally time for the consoles to shine, with a shower of new announcements. In celebration, Matthew Jarvis looks back at the history – and future – of the sector

XBOX LOGO STICKER

Xbox fans can express their fondness for Microsoft’s consoles thanks to this sticker of the machine’s recognisable logo.

SRP: $1.25 (£0.82)Manufacturer: MicrosoftDistributor: MicrosoftContact: [email protected]

PLAYSTATION METAL CONTROLLER BUCKLE

The PlayStation DualShock controller can do many things, including help keep trousers up, it seems.

SRP: £13.99Manufacturer: Bioworld MerchandisingDistributor: Gaming Merchandise UKContact: [email protected]

SEGA DREAMCAST BAG

It may’ve been short-lived at the time, but the legacy of Sega’s last console lives on. Players can show their admiration with this bag.

SRP: £30Manufacturer: Insert CoinDistributor: Insert CoinContact: [email protected]

CONSOLES

Page 37: MCV837 June 12th

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 201537

Sponsored by

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CONSOLES

has shifted in excess of 155 million units, and is often cited as one of the greatest home consoles ever made. The original PlayStation is

the second-best-selling home console, with over 102 million

sold since 1994. However, Sony says the PS4 is already outpacing its predecessors.

Away from PlayStation, Nintendo’s past hardware

output maintains a high level of nostalgia among gamers. Iconic console and controller designs

such as the NES and SNES have lent themselves to swathes of merchandise. The Wii has also sold well over 100m units worldwide.

Of course, Microsoft’s machines have a fervent fanbase, with the Xbox 360 proving the biggest-selling console of the last generation in the UK.

E3 is sure to reignite console fans’ passion for their chosen machine, making a healthy stock of console-branded products a must for any retailer.

NINTENDO ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEM BACKPACK

Nintendo’s fi rst system, the 8-bit NES, helped to defi ne not only the games industry of the 1980s, but everything that came afterwards. Fans can express their love and nostalgia for the console with this backpack, which blows up the NES’s famous rectangular control pad to provide plenty of storage space.

SRP: £34.99Manufacturer: Bioworld Merchandising Distributor: Five Element DistributionContact: info@fi veelementdistribution.co.uk

XBOX 360 CONTROL FREAK T-SHIRT

Featuring the Xbox 360 controller, this shirt lets players display their obsession with Microsoft’s highly popular hardware.

SRP: $12.95 (£8)Manufacturer: MicrosoftDistributor: MicrosoftContact: [email protected]

RUBBER CONTROLLER KEYCHAIN

This rubberised take on the NES’ pad allows Nintendo lovers to take their nostalgia for the fi rm’s fi rst console with them.

SRP: £3.99Manufacturer: NintendoDistributor: Five Element DistributionContact: info@fi veelementdistribution.co.uk

RETRO JOYSTICK COAT HOOK

Recalling the simplistic controls of the very fi rst consoles, this useful coat hook can add a retro touch to gamers’ homes.

SRP: £14.99Manufacturer: Wiki GadgetsDistributor: BunkerboundContact: [email protected]

Page 38: MCV837 June 12th

38

HOT PRODUCTS

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com

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HOT PRODUCTS

AFTERGLOW ANKA WIRELESS HEADSET FOR XBOX ONE

HOT on the heels of its Kral wireless headset for PS4, PDP has revealed the Anka for Xbox One.

The accessories specialist claims that the Anka is the fi rst fully wireless headset released for Microsoft’s machine.

The peripheral connects via an included USB transmitter, which also supports PC and Mac. Up to 100 feet of wireless range can be achieved while using the headset.

The dongle is additionally plug and play compatible, meaning no extra drivers are required.

Two diff erent audio modes are available, and can be selected by the user by pressing the ‘Mode’ button integrated into the Anka’s left earcup. Bass Boost increases the presence of low frequency sounds, while Pure Audio increases accuracy of noises, boosting clarity and realism.

In addition, the headset also includes controls for master volume and instant self-muting, which disables the built-in microphone while chatting online.

The microphone is retractable when not in use, and features noise cancelling to increase the clarity of the user’s voice while speaking and decrease distortion.

The Anka off ers up to 16 hours of life on a single battery charge, or can be optionally connected using the included play and charge cable to provide uninterrupted use.

AMIIBO ACTION REPLAY POWERSAVES

WITH Nintendo’s toys-to-life Amiibo continuing to sell out at a rapid pace, Datel hopes that its latest Action Replay product will prove highly popular with fans.

PowerSaves allows Nintendo players to enhance their Amiibo. By placing the fi gurines on the included PowerSaves platform, the system will then automatically recognise the characters.

A number of power-ups and extra abilities can then be selected and applied from a list of hundreds of diff erent profi les.

Players then hit the ‘boost’ key to make the augmented Amiibo ready to be used.

The software lets gamers back up their Amiibo saves, securing them against the risk of losing data. The recovered information can be restored within seconds.

Extra Amiibo saves and improvements can be added by going online and retrieving them for free, after connecting the platform to a PC via the included USB cable.

[INFO]

RRP: £99.99Release Date: August 28thDistributor: ExertisContact: 01279 822 822

[INFO]

RRP: £23.99Release Date: Out NowDistributor: DatelContact: [email protected]

MCV takes a look at the best accessories heading to UK retail. This week, we take a look at PDP’s new glowing headset for Xbox One and power up our

Amiibo with Datel’s latest Action Replay

Page 39: MCV837 June 12th
Page 40: MCV837 June 12th

DIRECTORY

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com40

CREATIVE Fink ................................................................. [email protected]

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RATES £70 per two column box (100mm x 75mm). To run weekly for a minimum of 1 year. Please phone for other size and/or position requirements.

TOTAL DISC REPAIR DISC REPAIR

Tel: +44 (0) 1202 489500 Web: www.totaldiscrepair.co.uk

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DIRECTORY

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ENQUIRIES

CONOR TALLONTel: 01992 [email protected]

SONY DADC DISTRIBUTION

Tel: +44 207 462 [email protected]

www.sonydadc.com

Empowering your creative business

Tel: +44 (0) 207 462 6200 Web: www.sonydadc.com

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CREATIVE DISTRIBUTION DISTRIBUTION

Tel: +44 (0) 208 6643456 Web: www.creativedistribution.co.uk

CURVEBALL LEISURE DISTRIBUTION

Tel: +44 (0) 1792 652521 Web: www.curveball-leisure.com

ENARXIS DYNAMIC MEDIA DISTRIBUTION

Tel: +302 1090 11900 Web: www.enarxis.eu

Page 42: MCV837 June 12th

DIRECTORY

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com42

L3I GAMING ACCESSORIES

Tel: + (0)1923 471 020 Web: www.logic3.com

VENOM GAMING ACCESSORIES

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WANT TO ADVERTISE IN OUR DIRECTORY?

ADVERTISE WITH US

CALL CONOR TALLON ON 01992 535647 OR EMAIL HIM AT [email protected]

Page 43: MCV837 June 12th

43www.mcvuk.com June 12th 2015

INSIDER’S GUIDE

Tell us about your new PR firm.Renaissance is all about legacy, based on doing PR since 1997. The Renaissance approach is pragmatic with no jargon. Any project is focused on the consumer, putting the media and the client on a similar level. What makes Renaissance stand out from its competitors?I see other agencies as partners rather than competitors. We offer PR services, but we also help other agencies with pitches before they present to clients. On top of that, I am creating a bootcamp for indie developers that have no resource to hire a PR agency and want to create their own campaign. What clients will you be working with?We are working with Revolution on the launch of Broken Sword 5 for PS4 and Xbox One, Slitherine Software for corporate PR, Domino Effect in preparing their first Kickstarter project and Digital Tales for the release of the official SBK15 game. We also cover all of Europe for PIXYUL, which is a studio comprised of former developers of Far Cry, Assassin’s Creed and Deus Ex, during the launch of their Steam Early Access game BIOS. What are your aims for the firm?Renaissance wants to bring experience to people that need it and passion to reaffirm the role of PR as a facilitator for media

in creating content relevant for clients in the most transparent way possible. In five years I see Renaissance as a big team of seasoned and dynamic people, all working together with selected clients that share our vision. Tell us something about your company no one knows.The first idea for Renaissance dated back to 2013. How did you choose your company name?‘Renaissance’ could not be more appropriate for the changes taking place in the world of PR.

Former Ubisoft senior PR manager Stefano Petrullo discusses setting up his own PR outlet, Renaissance

Specialism: PRLocation: Flat 20, The Clocktower,Kings Road,Woking,GU21 5HU

Contact: W: petrullo.co.ukE: [email protected]: +44 (0) 7828 692 315T: @iltrullo

INSIDER’S GUIDERENAISSANCE PR WHO?

PLEASE CONTACT [email protected] OR CALL 01992 515 303

WANT TO FEATURE YOUR COMPANY IN INSIDER’S GUIDE?

I am creating a bootcamp for indie developers that have no resource to hire a PR agency.

THIS MONTH’S DIRECTORY SPOTLIGHT:Epic Games .................................................. www.epicgames.com/careers

To be included in the Develop Directory (which appears every month in Develop and now every week in MCV) contact [email protected]

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Develop is the only dedicated publication for the UK and European games development community. It reaches over 8,500 subscribers every month.

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Page 44: MCV837 June 12th

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MORE than 150 million Americans now play video games, according to national trade body the Entertainment Software Association (ESA).

The organisation’s latest industry report states that 42 per cent of Americans play games regularly, for at least three hours weekly.

A third of players aged 13 and up now game on mobile platforms. However, the ESA adds that mobile’s success hasn’t necessarily impacted traditional games platforms, with more than half (54 per cent) of gamers saying their playing time has increased across all devices.

SuperData Research observes that the US games software

market grew from a value of $16.8bn (£10.9bn) in 2013 to $18.4bn (£12bn) last year, with a total of $19.8bn (£12.9bn) estimated by the end of 2015.

This is primarily driven by mobile, with the sector estimated to rake in $4.5bn (£2.9bn) in revenue

during 2015.The ESA says

that digital sales comprise 52 per cent of overall game sales. SuperData adds that, in April of this year, Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare was the biggest-earning

digital console title, generating $14.4 million (£6.4m).

Among the challenges facing US development are meritless patent lawsuits and strict immigration laws that make it hard to retain talent.

The US games software market grew to a value of $18.4 billion in 2014.

FACTFILE: UNITED STATES

Population: 320,925,485Capital City: Washington, D.C.Currency: DollarGDP (Per Capita): $54,596

KEY RETAILERS GameStop, Target, Walmart, Best Buy, Toys R Us, Kmart, Costco, Fred Meyer, Fry’s Electronics, Hastings Entertainment, Play N Trade, Gamers, Slackers

KEY DISTRIBUTORSUS Games Distribution, BigBen Interactive, BR-1 America, CI Games, Creative Mind, EZ Games, Mecca Electronics, Ram Rom Games, Royal Electronics, EOne, GameWorld, Importel, Koch Media, Play N Trade

TOP DEVELOPERSRockstar, 343 Industries, Bungie, Blizzard, Ubisoft, Retro Studios, Infinity Ward, Treyarch, Sony, Naughty Dog, EA, Epic Games, Capcom, BioWare, Bethesda, Id Software, PopCap, Riot Games

PUBLISHERS IN THE REGIONSony, Microsoft, Nintendo, EA, Ubisoft, Warner Bros, Activision Blizzard, Bethesda, Bandai Namco, Square Enix, Take-Two, Sega, Capcom, Telltale Games, Konami, Riot Games

INTERNATIONAL

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MEANWHILE IN... JAPAN

THE 8GB Wii U Basic is no longer available in Japan.

Nintendo announced that the lower-priced edition of its latest console would ‘go out of production shortly’ last month.

This makes the Wii U Premium, a black machine with 32GB of storage, currently the only option for gamers in Japan.

However, from July 13th, a white 32GB Premium Wii U offering will be introduced to the region.

Nintendo recently saw the Wii U return to the top of the rankings in Japan, as Splatoon’s chart-topping week one sales helped the machine become the best-selling console for that week.

The Wii U Basic was rumoured for discontinuation in the UK late last year, following a significant cut of the trade price for the budget model. Retail sources told MCV at the time that the £70 discount was

part of an effort to clear existing stock.

Nintendo has yet to state whether the Basic Wii U SKU will also be halted outside of Japan.

The lower-tier SKU of Nintendo’s Wii U console is now out of production in Japan, with a new model set for introduction in July

www mcvuk com June 12th 201545

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INTERNATIONAL DISTRIBUTION

WORLDWIDE

CLICK ENTERTAINMENT LIMITEDEmail: [email protected]: www.click-entertainment.comPhone: +44 (0)203 137 3781

TO ADVERTISE IN THIS SECTION PLEASE CONTACT [email protected]

MCV WORLDWIDE

GLOBAL DISTRIBUTORSIF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR NEW PARTNERS OVERSEAS, THEN LOOK NO FURTHER

SWEDEN

GAME OUTLET EUROPE ABPO Box 5083, S-650 05 Karlstad, SwedenSales dept: [email protected] dept: [email protected] dept: [email protected] dept: [email protected]: www.gameoutlet.se

AUSTRALIAAFA Interactive, Bluemouth Interactive, Five Star Games, Mindscape, Namco Bandai Partners, Turn Left DistributionBENELUXCLD Distribution, Koch Media, Gameworld Distribution B.V.CANADAE One, Importel, Just4Games, Solutions 2 Go, VidéoglobeCYPRUSAccess, Gibareio, Zilos, Nortec MultimediaCZECH REPUBLICCenega, Conquest, Comgad, Playman, ABC DataDENMARKBergsala, Elpa, Impulse, Koch Media, Nordisk Film Interactive, Nordic Game Supply, PAN VisionFRANCEBig Ben, Innelec, Koch Media, SDO, SodifaGREECEZegatron, CD Media, Namco Bandai Partners, IGE, Nortec, Enarxis, BeaconHUNGARYCNG.hu/Cenega Hungary, CTC Trading, Magnew, PlayON, StadlbauerICELANDSena, Myndform, Samfilm, OrmssonINDONESIAMaxsoft, Uptron, Technosolution IRELANDMSE Group, BaumexJAPANAjioka, Happinet, JesnetNORWAYBergsala, Game Outlet, Koch Media, Nordic Game Supply, Nordisk Film, Pan VisionPOLANDCD Projekt, Cenega, Galapagos, LEMPORTUGALEcoplay, Infocapital, Koch Media, Namco BandaiROMANIABest DistributionSERBIAComTrade, Computerland/Iris Mega, Extreme CCSPAINDigital Bros, Koch Media, Namco Bandai Partners, NobilisSWEDENBergsala, Koch Media, Namco Bandai, Nordic Game Supply, PAN Vision, Wendros, Ztorm (digital)UAERed Entertainment Distribution, Pluto Games (LS2 Pluto), Viva Entertainment, Gameplay Entertainment, Geekay Distribution

UAE

ALESAYI UNITED COMPANYVideo Games Distributor in the Middle East, P.O BOX 16999 Jebel Ali Free Zone Dubai U.A.E.Tel: 00971 4 883 5960Fax: 00971 4 883 5175Email: [email protected] U.A.E. Website: www.alesayi.ae Group Website: www.alesayi.com

NORDIC

WENDROS AB SWEDEN, NORWAY, DENMARK & FINLANDJakobsdalsvägen 1712653 HägerstenSwedenPhone: +46 8 51942500Fax: +46 8 7466790Email:[email protected]@wendros.seWeb: www.wendros.se

CYPRUS

G3 GREAT GAMES LTD4 Gregoriou Papafl essa Street, Offi ce 101, Engomi, Nicosia 2414, Cyprus.Tel: +357 22 666612 Web: www.greatgames.com.cy

BRAZIL

Sony Music Entertainment Brasil# 1 Physical Distributor in BrazilRua Lauro Muller n°. 116 – 40°. AndarSalas 4001 a 4003 BotafogoRio de Janeiro RJCEP. 22.290-160Tel. +55 21 2128-0771Fax: +55 21 2128-0747Email : [email protected]: www.sonymusic.com.br | www.day1e.com.br

IRAN

DC GAMES GROUPNo.9, Hemmatian St.,Takestan St., SattarkhanTehran, IranTel: +98-912-1014090 +98-21-44228670Email: [email protected]: www.Doostan-Co.com

WWW.MCVPACIFIC.COM

Editorial: + 61 (0)424 967 263Leigh.Harris@mcvpacifi c.com

Advertising: + 61 (0)417 084821Joel.Vandaal@mcvpacifi c.com

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com46

MORE DISTRIBUTORS

Sponsored by

BELGIUM

CLD DISTRIBUTIONRue du Grand Champs 14 , B 5380 Fernelmont BelgiumTel: +32 81 83 02 02Fax: +32 81 83 02 09Email: [email protected]: www.cld.be home of www.dragonwar.eu & www.mawashi.eu

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June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com48

OFF THE RECORD

IN ASSOCIATION WITH

DON’T MISS YOUR CHANCE TO WIN AN XBOX ONEIT’S OUR FINAL XBOX ONE GIVEAWAY – AND IT’S A SUPER CHALLENGE TO END WITHXBOX teamed up with MCV over the last two and a half months to run a series of weekly challenges.

Every Friday, Xbox has tested gamers and posed key questions based around upcoming events.

Just for industry folk and retailers, there’s a way to take part via MCV which could win you some fantastic prizes.

This week’s challenge is our last competition for now, which means it’s your last chance to win a brand new Xbox One. Enter now by tweeting your answer to us, emailing us or posting on our social feeds.

MCV XBOX CHALLENGE NO.10:

HEROES AND VILLAINS It’s our tenth #AllForOne challenge, which also means it’s your last chance to get your hands on an Xbox One.

With Batman swooping onto consoles later this month and the cinema gearing up for a summer of superheroes, we want to see your best hero and villain costumes. Use what you can fi nd, from random rags to creative takes on existing clothes, then snap a picture and show us (see right).

HOW TO ENTER Tweet us with a picture or

video of your entry to @MCVonline - don’t forget to use #AllForOne with your entry. Make sure you use both our handle and the hashtag!

You can also send entries to off [email protected] - use #AllForOne in the subject

Alternatively tell us via Facebook - you can fi nd us at facebook.com/MCVonline

Deadline for entries is 5pm on Friday, June 19th

WIN!

#ALLFORONE, ONES FOR ALL

AFTER weeks of intense competition, we’re happy to reveal the fi rst winners of our #AllForOne challenge, held in collaboration with Xbox.

The fi rst four challenges asked members of the industry to get creative, designing Xbox-themed Easter Eggs, reminiscing about their best Halo memories, setting a new high score in Sunset Overdrive and getting gruesome with a zombie selfi e.

We had an infl ux of entries, from which we eventually pulled our fi rst four victors, who have all been sent their prize – a brand new Xbox One.

So, congratulations to week one winner Dits Symeou, week two top dog Cryss Leonhart of Aeria Games, week three’s collective victors at retailer Stark Computers and Gaming, and week four’s champion Claire Chamielec, who will be able to put her feet up and enjoy her prize after she runs the British 10k in London for SpecialEff ect in July.

This week’s challenge (below) is the tenth and fi nal chance to get your hands on an Xbox One – don’t miss out.

OFF THE RECORD This week, we reward our fi rst #AllForOne winners, PlayStation kicks off its Schools Cup fi nals and we connect Nintendo’s Jo Bartlett with Kevin Bacon

HAVE YOU ENTERED ANY OF OUR PAST CHALLENGES? THE NEXT SET OF WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED SOON

Page 49: MCV837 June 12th

www.mcvuk.com June 12th 201549

ON THE BALL

THE Games 5s wasn’t the only event to embrace the football-friendly weather last month.

PlayStation joined with the English Schools’ Football Association to again host the fi nals for the PlayStation Schools’ Cup at Reading FC’s home grounds, the Madejski Stadium.

More than 2,000 schools and 100,000 kids were whittled down to two teams: Oakwood Park from Maidstone and South Hunsley. In the end, it came down to penalties, with Oakwood taking the trophy 4-3.

Among the football stars to come and support the event were Aaron Ramsey, Andros Townsend and Nathaniel Chalobah.

WINNING STREAK

MOBILE studio Space Ape Games has convinced a load of YouTubers (pictured below) to streak for charity. No, not THAT kind of streaking.

Throughout June, Let’s Play stars Bjcandive, Nickatnyte, Jorge Yao, Jrod12399, Godson, Molt, DonJon, King24412 and TheAlvaro will be aiming to achieve a winning run of 10 victories in Space Ape title Rival Kingdoms, with the fi rst 100 to do so winning a $100 donation towards the charity of their choice.

The highest-streaking player will earn an additional $10,000 to give away to one of Space Ape’s 11 selected non-profi t organisations.

@drinkrelaxplay Watch it here with us instead!

Loading Bar Tuesday June 2nd

@cymrogav Make your Devolver appointment for the end of the day, as they have BBQ food and booze...

Gav Murphy, IGN Tuesday June 2nd

@johnneh Buy a new pair of trainers for E3 each year. Helps me mentally prepare and keeps my feet from imploding while I’m out there.

Johnny Chiodini, EurogamerTuesday June 2nd

@NeilGortz Dress like the locals and blend in.

Neil Gorton, Capcom Tuesday June 2nd

@_DanBoise_ Drink lots of Red Bull. It’s the easiest time to survive!

Dan Boise, GGS Tuesday June 2nd

@HollieB Want one of those free lunches? Bring some kind of weapon and your fi ghting spirit – you’re going to need it.

Hollie Bennett, PlayStation Tuesday June 2nd

@SvendJoscelyne Double-check booth locations - in 2011 I made the rookie mistake of booking two appointments back-to-back in opposite halls!

Svend Joscelyne, Ziff Davis Tuesday June 2nd

@simonjward Befriend a PR who has a comfy lounge with Wi-Fi. The press area is like walking through the Wild West 10 minutes after a shoot out.

Simon Ward, Toxic Magazine Tuesday June 2nd

THE WEEK IN 140 CHARACTERSE3 SPECIAL: We asked the industry for their advice on surviving the biggest event in games. Here are their tips:

OFF THE RECORD

Page 50: MCV837 June 12th

OFF THE RECORD

June 12th 2015 www.mcvuk.com50

...Michael Fassbender, who also appeared in 300 with...

...Gerard Butler. The grizzled action man also starred in a 2001 TV miniseries as...

...Attila the Hun, who is the focus of an expansion for PC title Total War, which is published by...

...Sega, at which Sarah Head is a senior PR executive, having formerly worked at Fever PR with...

...Jo Bartlett, head of communications at Nintendo UK.

SIX DEGREES OF JO BARTLETTAS THE MUCH-LOVED GAME OF CONNECTIONS RETURNS, WE FIND OUT HOW NINTENDO’S HEAD OF COMMS IS LINKED TO THE BACON HIMSELF

Kevin Bacon starred in X-Men: First Class with...

Page 51: MCV837 June 12th

PRIVATE TEAMThe player will have the possibility to create his personal team, buying custom bikes and liveries and choosing its name and logo!

BEAT THE TIMEthis new game mode, the player will have to beat the record on a

OFFICIAL ROSTER2015 MotoGP™, Moto2™ and

included!

GP CREDITSThe new virtual currency will allow to progress in the career and to buy bikes and liveries to customize your rider!

REAL EVENTSGet in the shoes of a real MotoGP™ Champion, change the reality or relive the most spectacular moments of the 2014 season!

IMPROVEMENTS Graphics and bike physics improvements will offer an even more realistic experience in MotoGP™15!

LIVE YOUR EXPERIENCE NOW

MotoGP™15 © 2015 Published and Developed by Milestone S.r.l. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2015 Dorna Sports S.L. - All rights reserved.

motogpvideogame.com #motogpvideogame

Page 52: MCV837 June 12th

MotoGP™15 © 2015 Published and Developed by Milestone S.r.l. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2015 Dorna Sports S.L. - All rights reserved.

motogpvideogame.com #motogpvideogame