Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Video Game Industry Catching Up To TV & Film Production

The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2015 12:12 PM
    TORONTO — The video game industry in Canada is growing by leaps and bounds and quickly catching up to film and television production as a major contributor to the economy.
     
    The Entertainment Software Association of Canada says the video game industry spent $2.36 billion on Canadian production in 2014.
     
    That's up almost 50 per cent in one year and now nearly as much as the domestic film industry, which spent $2.67 billion in the fiscal year ended March 2014, according to figures supplied by the Canadian Media Production Association.
     
    However, industry watchers say spending on video game production still amounts to less than half of total film and TV production in Canada when Hollywood studios and other foreign companies are included.
     
    In its annual report on the state of the video game business, ESAC said the industry directly employs 20,400 people across the country at an average annual salary of $71,300.
     
    The average age of employees is just 31 years.
     
    There are 472 active game studios in Canada, up 143 since 2013, yet most of the employment is still at large studios such as Electronic Arts, Ubisoft and Activision Blizzard.
     
    Canadian studios have produced high-profile titles such as Bioware Edmonton's "Dragon Age: Inquisition;" Ubisoft Montreal's "Assassin's Creed Syndicate," and Capcom Vancouver's "Dead Rising 3."
     
    Quebec is Canada's video game hub, accounting for around half of total employment and $1.14 billion in spending, followed by British Columbia and Ontario., ESAC says.
     
    Mobile video gaming now accounts for 31 per cent of revenues, up 20 per cent from 2013, as consumers shift away from game consoles, which drove sales over the past decade.
     
    Sales of games for consoles like the Sony PlayStation 4 or the Microsoft Xbox One still amount to 35 per cent of revenue, but have fallen by 32 per cent since 2013. PC gaming has remained steady at around a quarter of the industry's revenues, the association said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NHL Defenceman Accused Of Illegal Bear Hunt In B.C. Plans To Plead Guilty: Crown

    NHL Defenceman Accused Of Illegal Bear Hunt In B.C. Plans To Plead Guilty: Crown
    Clayton Stoner of the Anaheim Ducks faces five charges for a hunt in 2013, but his case was adjourned Friday.

    NHL Defenceman Accused Of Illegal Bear Hunt In B.C. Plans To Plead Guilty: Crown

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan's Top Priority: End Canada's Combat Mission In Iraq, Syria

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan's Top Priority: End Canada's Combat Mission In Iraq, Syria
     Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has given new defence minister his marching orders — and Harjit Sajjan's top priority is to end Canada's combat mission in Iraq and Syria.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan's Top Priority: End Canada's Combat Mission In Iraq, Syria

    B.C. Challenges College Over Discrimination Finding Against Indo-Canadian Vets

    B.C. Challenges College Over Discrimination Finding Against Indo-Canadian Vets
    The college was ordered to pay each doctor between $2,000 and $35,000 for "injury to dignity," plus thousands of dollars for loss of salaries and expenses.

    B.C. Challenges College Over Discrimination Finding Against Indo-Canadian Vets

    Richmond Son Found Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Mother's Death

    Yuan Xi Tang admitted to killing Lian Jie Guo, whose body was stuffed in a suitcase and thrown in the Fraser River.

    Richmond Son Found Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Mother's Death

    B.C. Driver Accused In Cyclist's Death Denies He Caused Crash On Highway 99

    B.C. Driver Accused In Cyclist's Death Denies He Caused Crash On Highway 99
    Samuel Alec says in court documents that the death of cyclist Ross Chafe on Highway 99 near Pemberton last May was not due to his negligence.

    B.C. Driver Accused In Cyclist's Death Denies He Caused Crash On Highway 99

    Boy, 9, Calls 911 From Van To Report Mom's Alleged Drunk Driving

    Boy, 9, Calls 911 From Van To Report Mom's Alleged Drunk Driving
    A Toronto-area woman is charged with impaired driving after police say her nine-year-old son called 911 while she was at the wheel.

    Boy, 9, Calls 911 From Van To Report Mom's Alleged Drunk Driving