Free-to-play monetization has helped turn mobile gaming into a $30 billion industry.
But many tactics of the successful leaders reflect a “slash-and-burn” mentality. They squeeze consumers for more money and put “pay walls” that block gamers from making further progress. Anatoly Ropotov, a seasoned game developer who became CEO of Game Insight in 2014, believes this behavior is short-sighted.
Ropotov has never shut down a mobile game just because it’s starting to lose players. And he has developed a credo of “sustainable free-to-play,” or running games in ways that generate good will among players. This includes enabling offline play, constantly updating game content so players have more choices, and delivering high-end simulation games that are graphically on the cutting edge.
So far, it has worked. The company has had more than 300 million downloads to date, it has grown to nine studios and more than 700 employees. The studio has launched popular franchises in simulation and hardcore mobile such as The Tribez and Paradise Island and recently announced a duo of games – Cloud Raiders: Survival Arena and My Country 3D.
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I interviewed Ropotov in a fireside chat about this philosophy at our GamesBeat 2015 conference. Here’s an edited transcript of our interview.
GamesBeat: You guys have gone through some changes in your move from Moscow to Vilnius. Can you talk about that?
Anatoly Ropotov: Originally I come from Riga, Latvia. That’s where I worked for my first studio. Our roots come from that region, a lot of our staff. This was more about making the change to become a truly global developer. We’ve had revenues from the U.S. and western Europe dominating our positions from day one. We’re making a move to become more transparent and open, both to the public and to potential investors.
GamesBeat: You became a European Union company.
Ropotov: Exactly. It’s easier to do business out of this region.
GamesBeat: Tell us more about Game Insight. You’re very well-known in eastern Europe, and you have 300 million downloads to date.
Ropotov: Almost six years ago we built the first ever simulation-tycoon game for social networks. Over those years we’ve grown to 700 people, nine studios, and the revenue from simulation-tycoon games category in our portfolio surpassed $200 million. It just keeps growing. We started as a social games company and we’ve transitioned into mobile games. We’ve made our first moves in that direction for simulation-tycoon games, hidden object games, and free-to-play.
Nowadays it’s much harder to get noticed, with so many new brands out there. For us it’s our heritage titles, franchises like The Tribez and Mystery Manor, which are some of the most well-known titles in their genres. That’s crucial.
GamesBeat: You guys are very big in the simulation games business.
Ropotov: We are. We have more than 10 games in operation across five platforms. Paradise Island, one of our biggest games, has more than 50 million downloads. We recently launched a sequel to that. We have a portfolio strategy, where we keep launching new games in this genre every quarter or so. Players move from one game to another as they update. It’s a big vertical for us. We keep supporting those players and those games on a constant basis.
GamesBeat: You call this “sustainable free-to-play.” Can you explain that?
Ropotov: It’s a term I coined to explain how to build a long-lasting franchise — launching something six years ago and just keeping on updating it, keeping the focus on the player experience.
There are three pillars to that. The first one is never shutting down a game. Lifetime we’ve launched more than 40 titles and most of those games can still be played. Some of them have restrictions on downloading, but players who have these games on their phones can keep playing. That’s very important from a brand perspective. Too many companies sunset games in a really nasty way, and they erode at their brand value by betraying their core audience of players. We want to keep our games running for years to come.
The biggest part of that is figuring out how the industry reinvents itself every year. We started as a social games company. We made our first moves into mobile gaming in familiar categories, and then created cross play between our Facebook and mobile games. We have a broad spectrum of experiences for our franchises. That’s another key point.
GamesBeat: That’s a rare thing in the business, though. When you buy something in a game, you should be able to expect to keep playing with that thing, keep playing the game.
Ropotov: This is a huge point for us. If a player’s started playing on one platform, he needs to have an easy way to restore his profile when he changes phone every year. Persistent profiles are key. Our customer support deals with all of that. It should be so transparent that people switching phones shouldn’t even notice, no matter if they’re on iOS or Android or any other platform. They should just seamlessly keep their progress and keep playing for many years. A lot of our franchises have been in operation for three, four, or five years.
The third pillar is to just keep delighting players with more content. Some amazing games have been kind of betrayed. Players are left out there with no new content. We do at least two updates a month for our IP. We have monthly things like real-life-based events – Christmas, Thanksgiving, the things people expect. Doing major updates like new levels, new content, new challenges for 10 titles a month is tough, but with experience I think we’ve nailed it.
GamesBeat: Offline play is also important to your goal of sustainable free-to-play.
Ropotov: Right. When we started in our region, offline was crucial. Connectivity wasn’t very well advanced. A lot of our players wanted to play while they were commuting, which meant poor connections. All of our games initially had offline play. Nowadays at least nine out of 10 games still do.
That creates extra trust in the brand. If anything happens to the game servers, players know they can still retain their progress, backup, restore, and keep playing those games. That’s a crucial part of sustainable free-to-play for us. We’re all about the players. Finding new ways to retain our audience in an organic way and making things easier for players is crucial.
GamesBeat: Tell us about your strategy. You’re targeting maybe 10 games a year for release.
Ropotov: We have two verticals. Our heritage business is simulations and hidden object games. We need to keep releasing titles in those genres. Our players expect to play at least three games in the simulation genre, so we keep releasing new games. We’re doing a lot of those games with 3D elements and social elements, a more modern approach. The second vertical is new 3D games in new genres where we’re building up new sources of revenue.
Out of those 10 titles a year, we have to release at least five titles in existing genres, and start delivering new titles with 3D content to be up to speed in the industry. All of the building blocks are arranged now. We’ll have a couple of exciting launches coming up.
GamesBeat: It helps to have nine studios to do that. We heard Niccolo de Masi talking about a portfolio strategy recently, though, and we heard Gabe Leydon talking about how you can only do one game well. There’s some pressure to go where Gabe is. How are you finding the right balance?
Ropotov: We’re making some major bets on multiple titles in development by big teams of 50 people or more, spending more than two years on those titles. Not just one game, but a couple at the same time. That’s in our new vertical, making and defining new game genres. We have a new turn-based strategy game coming out, MMO style, with clans, chats, and lot of interaction.
That’s what players want nowadays. They’re ready for much deeper experiences. Christian had an amazing session about Vainglory. We’re following that example. We hope to be at the center of a few game genres that haven’t yet been pioneered in free-to-play and mobile.
GamesBeat: What’s your own view of eastern Europe as a market, as an opportunity?
Ropotov: It goes up and down. We have crisis cycles in this region. It’s our home market, where we soft launch and beta test a lot of titles. The potential is there. We draw about 10 percent of our revenue from that region. But the U.S., western Europe, and recently Asia have been stronger priorities for us.
It’s a good market to do a lot of things, a cheap way to launch titles and see how the scaling works. But if a country goes through crisis, you see less player spend for new games. That makes it risky to beta test things. We still also do that in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, countries like that.
GamesBeat: How else have you thought about becoming a global company, instead of an eastern European company?
Ropotov: For us it’s all about branding and brand values. The Tribez, which is our biggest franchise, we’re following that up with a new game which we’re announcing in the coming year. It should spark a new wave of interest for the Tribez franchise. The Tribez dinosaur has been our mascot for quite a while, and it’s been very popular this past year. We’ll build up those core brands, and we hope we’ll be known for the characters from our games. That’s going to be a strategy for a couple of our next titles.
GamesBeat: You’ve just launched Cloud Raiders: Survival Arena.
Ropotov: Yep. We’ve been excited to showcase and launch that today on Facebook. It’s going to roll out to six platforms. That’s one example of where we take a well-known gameplay mechanic that’s been underserved for hardcore gamers. Amazing tower defense games have been around since Warcraft III. We came back to those old games, to that experience, and created a cross-play experience for all six platforms. We have heroes, clans, chats, daily challenges, tournaments, and things like that. This is going to be a new direction for us to serve those hardcore gamers in a more eSports-like experience.
GamesBeat: You’re focused on 3D simulation as well. You have My Country 3D. You haven’t advertised it this way, but it’s kind of a marriage of The Sims and SimCity.
Ropotov: Six years ago we defined what modern simulation-tycoon games looked like. I can’t say that I’m satisfied with what I did six years ago and how it lasted. We came back to the roots of old-school games like Rollercoaster Tycoon, where you could micromanage people and drop them here or there, or Bullfrog titles like Theme Hospital.
We fused that legacy of amazing experiences into a single title, where you could micromanage people on the level of a city, zoom out and see the huge skyscrapers, zoom in and build new things at the same time. We’ve been building the game for almost two years now in close cooperation with Unity. We have a new-generation game engine with endless landscapes.
My Country 3D is going to be one of those crucial points where we try to redefine a stale genre, one where a lot of elements have grown tired for players. Players want something innovative.
GamesBeat: What’s the road map as far as how to do more sustainable free-to-play and serve your customers on a global stage?
Ropotov: We’ll keep releasing games in our existing franchises, as I mentioned, like Paradise Island 2. For our new direction, we have an exciting lineup of 3D games, including X-Mercs, a turn-based strategy game. We’ll have a few more announcements, including something perhaps as ambitious as a first-person shooter. We’ll see how it goes.
GamesBeat: Is this part of your message of constant change?
Ropotov: A lot of us come from an MMO development background. At our previous company, we used to work for Perfect World in eastern Europe. We’ve taken that experience, and with mobile platforms and 4G LTE connectivity, it’s all there. If you look at Vainglory and what they’ve achieved, that couldn’t have been done a few years ago with weaker connectivity.
We want to create the kind of great games that have been operated in the MMO space and help them transcend the mobile experience. We’ll figure out the session play times — will players play for a few hours, or in shorter sessions? We’ll try out the genres that have been underserved in mobile and see if we can nail a few of them down. 3D graphics, MMO-like gameplay, clans, twitch integration, these are all the check marks we’re ticking off.
All of this is cross-platform. For all of our franchises, we want to have the broadest reach into the audience that we can. Most of our games are on five or six platforms, on mobile and desktop.
It’s hard to find an equilibrium in monetizing players and making titles sustainable from a revenue perspective, so the team can continue to create content that will serve those players. We want to have enough experiences for players to keep playing for a long time. We’ve yet to find that equilibrium for every title and every genre, but we’re making some bets in an exploratory direction. It’s a little scary, but we’re excited about the prospects.
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