VN game industry can become big exporter: experts


Viet Nam’s mobile game market has huge potential and games can become one of the country’s major exports, experts have said.

A mobile music game from Vietnamese publisher Amanotes. Viet Nam’s mobile gaming market has huge growth potential due to the popularity of gaming and enormous number of smartphone users. – Photo vneconomy.vn

Viet Nam’s mobile game market has huge potential and games can become one of the country’s major exports, experts have said.

According to the mobile market data and analytic platform App Annie, in 2020 game companies from Viet Nam ranked seventh in terms of downloads in the world and second in South East Asia.

For every 25 games downloaded, one was made in Viet Nam.

Viet Nam is home to a lot of mobile app and game publishers and has a heavily mobile-first consumer base, according to App Annie.

There are 68 million Vietnamese smartphone users, and the average daily time spent on gaming is nearly four hours.

Vu Quoc Huy, director of the Ministry of Planning and Investment's Viet Nam National Innovation Centre, said game revenues topped VND12 trillion ($519.2 million) in 2020, double the 2015 value.

Gaming consumer spending grew by 50 per cent in 2020, according to App Annie.

Flappy Bird, a Vietnamese-made game for smartphones, became a global sensation in 2014, and since then many other local game companies have made a big impact on the global market.

Last year the country’s Amanotes announced total downloads of over one billion, making it the number one game publisher by downloads across Australia, New Zealand and South East Asia.

Tram Nguyen, country director for Google Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, said her company had been aiding applications developers and start-ups in Viet Nam for a decade with networking and training events.

Nguyen Quang Dong, rector of the Institute for Policy Studies and Media Development in Ha Noi, said that Viet Nam’s video game industry had huge potential and is currently Viet Nam’s only digital product export to the world.

But there were misconceptions and prejudices towards game businesses, and changing society’s outlook and getting rid of legal barriers could help boost the development of the industry, he said.

Understanding and identifying the video game industry as a high-potential digital industry could help Viet Nam come up with new policies and make changes to existing regulations to enable its growth, he added.

Global revenues from video games grew by 9 per cent in 2020 to US$159.3 billion, with mobile-only games revenues accounting for half the figure. – VNS

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