Gaming

Video Games are no Longer a Man’s World


Video games are no longer the man’s world alone. Women are beginning to lay claim to this, once men exclusive world and, it is a good thing.

While there persists a strong perception that men dominate this entertainment realm, industry surveys and data put the ratio of female to male gamers closer to equality.

What Data is saying…

According to Data on Statista, in 2006, only a mere 38% of gamers are females fast forward to 2015, and the percentage of female players has increased by 10% to 48%. In 2019, though slightly less than the number in 2015, the percentage of women who identified as gamers were 46% of the total percentage of people who said they are gamers. 

This Data implies that unlike traditionally held belief that gaming is more popular with males, the real state of things tended towards a more equitable distribution of the gaming demographics.  

The situation is pretty similar in terms of gambling; more women are beginning to take an active interest in gambling-related events. Though, most female gamblers prefer lotteries and slots online like those present in the Unibet casino lobby, bigger payouts than are obtainable in playing table games like poker and blackjack and shorter gaming sessions.

What this means for the industry

With this emerging trend, stakeholders in the gaming industry – game publishers, vendors, developers, and anyone involved with the industry in some way – must begin to think of ways to become more inclusive. Gamers are very likely to start seeing more female-centric content, more female characters taking center stage and perhaps at best, more gender-neutral games.

It’s also imperative for marketers to anticipate and begin to understand the impact of increasing female participation in the industry, so they can effectively run and manage campaigns that cater to the growing female gaming audience.

Unfortunately, the old thinking persists in some circles

Oddly, as can be seen in discussion across several online fora, this emerging statistic has the opposite intended effect. Some gamers argue most of the survey lump gamers across genres and platforms together, hence, making an unrealistic representation of players across the PC/Console divide. 

Some even go as far as to point out that, the almost gender parity means gender bias in game design is a thing of the past. Unfortunately, that’s a far cry from the persisting perception among gamer developers. It is prevalent for most developers to assume only 5% of core gamers are women and that majority of the quote 41% are just casual gamers.

Females 50 years and above play more video games than males

See Also

As data on Statista indicates, 33% of the U.S. gaming community is made up of adult females, of which 30% of the female gamers are aged between 18 and 35.

While young people regardless of gender play more games than any other age group, 49% of females under 30 reported that they play video games. Interestingly, it appears as age increases the gaming gender gap lessens. It is found that among adults aged 50 and above, 30% of females report playing video games, while only 27% of males in this age range report doing so.

A 2018 Entertainment Software Association’s report found that the average female video gamer is 36, a year less than 2017’s at 37. The same report found the average age of the male gamer to be 32 years.

Female mobile gamers are dominating the space

However, when you look at the trend in mobile games, female gamers appear to be topping the charts. One out of every three female gamer says they are willing to pay for mobile game content – which makes them a very viable economic demographics for marketers. 

Interestingly, a Mediakit report found that approximately 63% of mobile gamers are female outstripping male mobile players at 37%. And as expected, 60% of female mobile gamers spend more time playing games every day than male mobile gamers at 47%.





READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.