Gamers in Vietnam could be paying more than $80m annually to play games
online within two years, a local industry body predicted today.
However, foreign software developers are far ahead of local firms when it
comes to profiting from the market, according to officials from the
Vietnam
Software Association (VSA).
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Vietnam's online games market will be worth $50m by 2007, growing steadily to
reach $83m by 2010, according to the forecasts.
The VSA estimated last year that the average gamer spends as much as $50 per
year, and that around two million people play regularly.
Many games are free to play, although gamers pay to acquire in-game items,
such as weapons, that enhance their status in the game world.
Hardcore gamers may also pay more than $10 per month in internet café charges
in a country where private PC ownership is still relatively rare.
VinaGame,
one of the country's largest games publishers with more than 450 employees,
claims that eight million accounts have been set up by players of its games.
However, most games are developed overseas. VinaGame's biggest hit,
Swordsman Online, is a localised version of a game developed for the
Chinese market by Chinese firm
Kingsoft.
Swordsman Online was so popular at one point, with more than a
quarter of a million players, that the government considered banning new
accounts because the traffic was overloading the country's internet
infrastructure.
Online games developed in China and South Korea are the most popular with
Vietnamese gamers, VSA executives reported.
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