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Structure and Competition in the U.S. Home Video Game Industry

In: The International Journal on Media Management, Volume 4, No. 1, 2002

Keywords: Regional Issues , video game industry
Parent document:
Text type: journal paper
NetAcademy: International Journal on Media Management
Language: English
Quality: double-blind reviewed
Authors: Williams, Dmitri

Abstract: The video game industry has continued to grow dramatically over the past decade, cutting into mainstream media in participation and revenues as it becomes part of mainstream media culture. Following the industrial organization model, this paperconceptualizes and systematically analyzes five vertical stages and the key market segments of consoles, handheld and PC-based games. Genre-based measures of content show that the different game platforms have varying levels of product diversity, driven by differing levels of risk and rewards. Comparisons in production and distribution are made with other major media. The main conclusion is that the industry is reaching a mature phase with concentration and integration beginning to be found in its stages. A mainstreaming of content is partially countered by a vibrant commnity of developers, mostly for PC games. As a standard-based industry, non-interoperability and network effects continue to play a key role in preserving competition in a field with a shrinking number of firms.

Citation: Williams, Dmitri(2002): Structure and Competition in the U.S. Home Video Game Industry, in:The International Journal on Media Management, Volume 4, No. 1, 2002, http://www.businessmedia.org/modules/pub/view.php/mediajournal-5, [01/07/2009]
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