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World of Warcraft monthly subscribers fall slightly to 5.5M — and Blizzard will no longer report player numbers

Jaina World of Warcraft

Jaina in World of Warcraft, giving her king a little advice: Kill them all.

Image Credit: Heather Newman

I don’t think Blizzard wants us to watch World of Warcraft’s subscription numbers continue to shrink.

Activision Blizzard revealed today that its popular MMO (massively multiplayer online role-playing game) now has 5.5 million monthly subscribers paying around $15 every 30 days, in its last report of this number. This is a slight drop from the 5.6 million it reported in August. This could mean that while the bleeding isn’t stopping, it might be leveling out.

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However, this number still represents the MMO’s lowest player base since 2005. World of Warcraft originally came out in late 2004. It’s easily the most popular MMO out there, with most of its competitors ditching the monthly subscription model all together. At its peak, World of Warcraft had 12 million paying players in 2010. This number could go back up after the release of Legion, the game’s sixth expansion. We’ll likely hear more about it at this week’s BlizzCon event.

According to GameSpot, Activision Blizzard will no longer report subscription numbers for World of Warcraft, so this will be the last time we can use this metric as a way of measuring the game’s popularity. In the future, the company will share unspecified engagement numbers. These could focus more on total revenue and hours played.

The MMO market was worth $17 billion in 2014, according to Newzoo, with 85 percent of that revenue coming from free-to-play. While MMOs were once the trendiest thing in PC gaming, MOBAs (multiplayer online battle arena) like League of Legends and Dota 2 have soared in popularity.