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

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians
    Surrey RCMP say a 39-year-old woman was hit just after 6 p.m. Tuesday as she crossed a street (in the 12500 block of 75A Avenue) near the Newton Recreation Centre

    Surrey And Abbotsford Police Appeal For Witnesses After Separate Accidents Injure Two Pedestrians

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home
    RCMP say a man approached the girl outside her home and tried to force his way inside

    Surrey Police Release Sketch Of South Asian Man Who Tried To Force His Way Into Home

    Labatt Breweries To Buy Mike's Hard Lemonade, Okanagan Cider For US$350 Million

    Labatt Breweries To Buy Mike's Hard Lemonade, Okanagan Cider For US$350 Million
    The deal is valued at US$350 million.

    Labatt Breweries To Buy Mike's Hard Lemonade, Okanagan Cider For US$350 Million

    Harold Backer, Missing B.C. Olympian Seen On Washington State Ferry Day He Disappeared: U.S. Police

    Harold Backer, Missing B.C. Olympian Seen On Washington State Ferry Day He Disappeared: U.S. Police
     Port Angeles Police Department says video surveillance shows a man matching Harold Backer's description on the Coho ferry last Tuesday.

    Harold Backer, Missing B.C. Olympian Seen On Washington State Ferry Day He Disappeared: U.S. Police

    Suicide In Military A Concern, Those At Risk Should Seek Help, Says Jonathan Vance

    Suicide In Military A Concern, Those At Risk Should Seek Help, Says Jonathan Vance
    The country's top military officer is weighing in with his concerns about the problem of suicide in the Canadian Armed Forces.

    Suicide In Military A Concern, Those At Risk Should Seek Help, Says Jonathan Vance

    Hand-Made Poppies Proudly Worn By Some Aboriginal Veterans To Show Respect

    Hand-Made Poppies Proudly Worn By Some Aboriginal Veterans To Show Respect
    About 19 million plastic poppies were distributed last year.

    Hand-Made Poppies Proudly Worn By Some Aboriginal Veterans To Show Respect