Ubisoft executive Chris Early foresees a future where physical game sales may continue to decline, but he doesn’t think they’ll ever go away completely.
The Assassin’s Creed publisher recently agreed to acquire cloud gaming rights outside the European Economic Area for all Activision Blizzard games released over the next 15 years.
And while the company’s is betting on streaming revolutionising the games industry in the same way it has transformed the TV and film businesses, Early, who was an influential figure in the negotiations for the Activision rights, thinks physical sales will always have a place.
“There’s a collector edition market,” Ubisoft’s SVP, strategic partnerships and business development, told the company’s website. “There’s the aspect of gifting physical items and allowing access for people to be able to easily purchase a game in a store and gift them to their friends or family.
“Some people will always want to own the physical disc. I just don’t think it’s going away. Do I think physical sales might get lower over time? Sure, but will it ever completely go away? I don’t think so.”
Microsoft, which already offers the all-digital Xbox Series S console, could be set to launch an all-digital Xbox Series X next year, according to a recent leak.
Sony, which currently offers disc-based and all-digital versions of the PS5, said digital accounted for 67% of the 264.2 million games sold for its consoles during its last fiscal year ended in March.
While most triple-A games currently receive dual physical and digital releases, some are only available to download.
Alan Wake 2 will be released this month as a digital-only game. Explaining the decision not to release a boxed copy, developer Remedy said: “For one, a large
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