Mobile games market generated $40.6 billion in worldwide revenue in 2016

Posted on Thursday, February 2, 2017 by RICHARD HARRIS, Executive Editor

First ever joint look at mobile, mobile VR and VR markets by SuperData Research and Unity Technologies shows the category equaling that of global box office sales during that time
 
The mobile games market generated $40.6 billion in worldwide revenue in 2016 - a sum equivalent to all global box office sales during the same time period - and grew 18% over the year before. Mobile games now account for half of the entire global digital games market.
 
That’s according to a report, “Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop: The 2016 Mobile Games Market” issued today by SuperData Research, a provider of marketing intelligence for the playable media and digital gaming industry, and Unity Technologies, a platform for creating games and experiences in 2D, 3D, VR and AR.
 
The analysis, which examines the combined mobile, mobile VR and VR markets, is the first to be issued jointly by the two companies and is based upon data from both.
 
“The sustained growth of the global mobile games market is helping to legitimize games in the traditional media landscape,” says Stephanie Llamas, VP of Research and Strategy of SuperData Research. “The size of the market is also attracting the leading players in the gaming market, as can be seen with Activision’s Blizzard deal to buy King and Tencent acquiring Supercell.”
 
According to the analysis by SuperData Research and Unity, Asia represents the largest mobile games market in the world, producing $24.8 billion in revenue in 2016, while North America and Europe generated $6.9 billion and $5.7 billion respectively.
 
The ever growing US mobile market also represents a tremendous opportunity for marketers, as now Americans play mobile games more often than they watch Netflix, Hulu, or YouTube. Americans spent 5% more year over year on mobile games in 2016, and that number will continue to rise.
 
“Players are installing more apps than ever and are more engaged with mobile games than TV and online videos,” shared John Cheng, General Manager of Unity Analytics. “They play six days a week and watch content only five. It’s been phenomenal to watch engagement on the different mobile and VR platforms grow, and that trend will continue to increase in the foreseeable future.”
 
From Q1 to Q4, the time spent on mobile games grew by 12% on iOS and 9% on Android respectively, with gamers averaging almost 30 minutes of play time each day. As consumers continue to spend more time playing on mobile devices, the companies expect mobile gaming will continue to make strides towards the mainstream, giving marketers and developers an even greater opportunity to monetize this trend.
 

Additional findings from the report include:


- 58% of mobile gamers play puzzle games, compared to 40% who play action games and 26% who play simulation games. Puzzle games don’t require high-level graphics and are ripe for on-the-go play.

- However, action games represent 30% of the share of game installs by genre, while puzzle games represent 14%.Unlike puzzle games, action games are quick to play through, and retain players at 70% the rate that puzzle games do.

- The U.S. is the only country with more players on iOS than Android. Android gamers represent 78% of the global market, but iOS continues to yield higher spending overall.

- In the U.S., developers made on average 45% more on a player using iOS over Android, but in China, Android players were worth eight times more than iOS.

- Indonesia tripled its potential for advertisers, seeing a 192% increase in installs in 2016. Spenders also play 84% more than the average Indian player, creating an undeniable opportunity for developers.

- Users engaged with VR more often than they did with games, movie, or TV. Mobile VR users engaged in 48 sessions per month, while PC/console users engaged in 36 sessions per month.

- Total VR revenue in 2016 was $1.8B, with 6.3 million devices sold. Samsung Gear VR came out as the leader with 4.5M devices sold due to a low barrier to entry as compared to high-price competitors like Oculus.

More App Developer News

Tether QVAC SDK Powers AI Across Devices and Platforms



APAC 5G expansion to fuel 347B mobile market by 2030



How AI is causing app litter everywhere



The App Economy Is Thriving



NIKKE 3.5 anniversary update livestream coming soon



New AI tool targets early dementia detection



Jentic launch gives AI agents api access



Experts warn ai-generated health content risks misinterpretation without human oversight



Ludo.ai Unveils API and MCP Beta to Power AI Game Asset Pipelines



AccuWeather Launches ChatGPT Integration for Live Weather Updates



Stop Using Business Jargon: 5 Ways Buzzwords Damage Job Performance



IT spending rises as banks balance legacy and innovation



Tech hiring slumps as Software Developer job postings fall



AI is becoming more widespread in collaboration tools



FCC prohibits new foreign router models citing critical infrastructure risks



ChatGPT Carbon Footprint Matches 1.3 Million Cars Report Finds



Lens Launches MCP Server to Connect AI Coding Assistants with Kubernetes



Accelerating corporate ai investment returns



Enviromates tech startup launches global participation platform



Private Repository Secures the AI-driven Development Boom



UK Fintech Platform Enviromates Connects Projects Brands and Consumers



Env Zero and CloudQuery Announce Merger



How Industrial AI Is Transforming Operations in 2026



AI generated work from managers is damaging trust among employees



Foresight Secures $25M to Bridge Infrastructure Execution Gap



Copyright © 2026 by Moonbeam

Address:
1855 S Ingram Mill Rd
STE# 201
Springfield, Mo 65804

Phone: 1-844-277-3386

Fax:417-429-2935

E-Mail: contact@appdevelopermagazine.com