$10M+ Production Budgets – Avoiding the Shark Fin

Much has been said on why mobile game budgets are rapidly rising. While this trend can be partially attributed to the increasing prevalence of 3D graphics, I’d like to explore several other facets that impact Kabam’s production strategy and thus budgets. Specifically, the majority of our production resources are spent on building the foundation for multiple gameplay and growth lines that keep Regulars playing for years (Regulars is a Kabam terminology for the core of a free-to-play player community and thus our business). Without these vectors in the game at launch, a product will inevitably become victim to the sharp falloff in engagement and retention we’ve seen time and time again. In short, we tailor our game budgets to deliberately avoid a phenomenon we call the “shark fin.”

A shark fin is a game that launches with a cultural groundswell of downloads due to gameplay market fit heat, platform featuring and press coverage among other factors. Shark fins also tend to have good but not great monetization designs. These games rise rapidly on both the Top Downloaded and Top Grossing charts for the first 7-30 days. But then, as word of mouth and overall momentum fades, the game plummets down the Top Downloaded chart. It then rapidly declines on the Top Grossing chart a few weeks later. Here’s a real-world example of a great game that succumbed to this phenomenon last summer:

A key reason shark fins exist is the early free-to-play design approach of building a minimal viable game for launch. Then, if it’s an early hit, laying tracks ahead of the train after it leaves the station, i.e., building out the rest of the game. However, we’ve now learned that the core players of a game often consume its content so quickly that this strategy inevitably leads to the train reaching the front of track much faster than the developer anticipated—or can remedy. By spending valuable resources on building out core game features months or years after launch, it becomes infeasible to simultaneously keep up with the content demands of players in both quantity and quality. This leads to a lopsided game of cat and mouse, and, when the delta between content and player needs becomes too great, results in a shark fin.

For larger game developers, a shark fin represents the worst case scenario: a lost franchise opportunity. Most developers, us included, have commercially released new games that stumbled out the gate. That’s simply part of the business. But a shark fin means a game was on the cusp of greatness with a significant audience, a gameplay loop that drove download heat along with early retention, and solid early monetization. What it lacked was long term retention—the consequence of launching with a minimal viable game. Kabam’s years of operating free-to-play games have led to five principle ingredients we feel are necessary for not only the successful launch of a game, but also the foundation that underpins the subsequent years of live service our games must have on day one of launch.

First is an approach to gameplay that gives the title an outsized chance of achieving high download heat. In the case of Marvel Contest of Champions, lovingly crafted by our Vancouver studio, we focused on a compelling mix of fighting genre innovation, a renowned IP license, and AAA visuals. The Vancouver studio was passionate about innovating on fighting game mechanics to feel intuitive on a touch screen. While other fighting games opt for virtual onscreen buttons, we developed a wholly gesture-based control scheme that integrates an established three-tier attack system—but also enables players to concentrate on the moment-to-moment action without worrying where their fingers are. This system is buttressed by an advanced combo and defense framework that empowers players to make deep strategic fighting choices. Our gameplay innovation, along with setting a new graphical bar on mobile for the genre and delivering on Marvel’s brand promise, makes it clear within seconds that Marvel Contest of Champions offers players a distinct fighting game experience.

 The second key ingredient is an extensible economy foundation with multiple well designed growth lines. It is far too common in our industry to see games that simply tack on extra features or items to the primary gameplay post launch in an attempt to monetize players and add a short bit of content runway. This approach worked in the early years of free-to-play when a game’s engagement cycles and lifespan were assumed to be minutes and months, respectively. But players today—particularly Regulars who play 40+ hours a week—require next-generation economy designs that enable thoughtfully integrated styles of gameplay and economy interactions. It is our responsibility as game makers to create captivating open roads for our players to traverse, not disjointed maze-like experiences that prioritize monetization. At Kabam, we do this by thinking about our gameplay loops and economies as a series of concentric circles where each part of the experience follows intuitively from the one before it and cannot exist on its own. We call these growth lines internally.


The outer rings of our games contain the third necessary ingredient: a deep elder game loop (elder game is jargon for when players reach a point in the game where level advancement is no longer the goal and other activities in the game become the appeal). These special types of gameplay loops typically come after the linear content (e.g., a single-player narrative campaign), are relatively self-sustaining between content updates, and are what enable games to have a high replayability factor. The simple fact is that players often progress through a game’s linear content much quicker than any developer is able to produce it. Thus we need compelling elder game systems after the linear content that players can engage in regardless of when they actually reach it. Elder gameplay loops today increasingly involve group cooperative gameplay, group competitive gameplay, or synchronous PvP. We design our elder game loops to not only have high replayability vectors, but also deliver uncapped engagement value. This means that our Regulars can sink their teeth into these loops for 6+ hours a day, and still feel rewarded for completing that last battle.

While there are countless factors that go into creating successful elder game systems, for Kabam the most crucial are grounded in social gameplay, the fourth key ingredient. A bit unusual in the industry, we put our in-game social gameplay on a pedestal and deeply integrate them in a diverse number of ways, from multi-function chat to collaborative and competitive group-based gameplay. Social gameplay, events and features serve to create and deepen relationships between players - and those strong interpersonal bonds formed around a great game experience become a powerful reason to come back to the game over and over again. Giving our players a way to communicate and interact with millions of other players is our mission for every game we make, and we strive to make the social systems not simply supplementary, but essential to the gameplay experience. In fact, many of the most interesting player interactions and rewards in Marvel Contest of Champions are derived from social group gameplay rather than the linear content.

The last key ingredient is a strong live operations foundation. This consists of the long term design plan for daily, weekly, and monthly events and content that keep the experience fresh for years after the launch of a title. Live operations also serve as the foundational glue that binds the other four aspects of a successful mobile game—in fact, we now think of live operations design as a critical part of the overall game design. I’ll call out that there is significant difficulty in designing and running a successful live service. The financial burden alone is prohibitive for many given that the low-end cost of running a successful live game is in the millions per year. But even more challenging is developing the foresight and judgement needed when designing live operations for games that are active for 10+ years. Our unique history has taught us many invaluable experiences that are critical in the creation and then running of a successful long-running mobile franchise.

Marvel Contest of Champions begins to demonstrate the potential of our strategy for avoiding the dreaded shark fin. While a fun fighting game and a Marvel license were some of the ingredients for the initial success of this title, the real magic to avoiding the dreaded shark fin comes with applying as much care, attention and production budget to several other major ingredients for a great mobile game. Our Vancouver studio’s love letter to Marvel fans has become a new franchise that builds on Kabam’s history of running multi-year games such as Kingdoms of Camelot, Dragons of Atlantis, Underworld Empire and The Hobbit. And we can’t wait to show the world what we’re working on as we take everything we’ve learned and apply it to our next generation of games such as Avatar and Transformers!


Sagar Kumar Bharadwaj

Founder & Director of Inkfeathers Pvt. Ltd.

4y

Great Article. Even it gives a clear picture for investors who have interest in investing in game industries

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Chris Kruger

Engineering Manager at VGW

7y

"While this trend can be partially attributed to the increasing prevalence of 3D graphics". Production values and associated costs have low correlation with the number of dimensions chosen for a product.

Billie Urabazo

End Alzheimer’s. 💜 Optioned Screenwriter, Options Trader, and author of « Chickie And The Great Barnyard Benefit. » Studying And searching for a cure for Multiple Chemical Sensitivities.

7y

💥thanks, Kevin Chou💥

Billie Urabazo

End Alzheimer’s. 💜 Optioned Screenwriter, Options Trader, and author of « Chickie And The Great Barnyard Benefit. » Studying And searching for a cure for Multiple Chemical Sensitivities.

7y

Graham Smith you might like this

Michael Morley

Sales Consultant @ Sunrun | Integrity Selling, Sandler Sales, New Business Development

7y

Kevin, great article! Covering San Francisco, I'd like to speak with you about how Juniper can assist you at Kabam. Do you have time in Q4?

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