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EA Q3 FY13 Results: FIFA hits 12M, Battlefield Premium 2.9M, Simpsons iOS $23M Rev

Duxxy3

Member
Frontline:Need For Speed outperformed last year’s title, despite softness in the
packaged goods market.
Medal of Honor performed well below our expectations.

Well I'd hope that it performed better than the run. It was hot garbage.
 
Dead Space™ 3 pre-sells are outpacing Dead Space 2, and Crysis® 3 pre-orders are tracking 40% ahead of Crysis 2.

I expected opposite situation for both. Glad I was proven wrong about their decline.

Frontline: Need For Speed outperformed last year’s title, despite softness in the packaged goods market. Medal of Honor performed well below our expectations.

Congrats Criterion and NFS then. And no surprise about MoH:W considering such a lackluster quality.
 

iMax

Member
Webcast Notes - I'll try and update as it goes along...

  • Consumers are behaving in a way reflective of a console transition
  • Console transitions are difficult, initiate periods of strong growth, represent significant opportunity
  • Working on new Battlefield and FIFA titles
  • Medal of Honor performed well below our expectations
  • Strong performance from FIFA, Need for Speed
  • NHL performance down
  • Packaged goods up $16 million, following FIFA/Battlefield 3
  • Strong Digital Performance
  • Deferring Battlefield Premium revenue of 15% to following quarter
  • 44 million full-game downloads
  • Majority of Q3 digital revenue came from FIFA, Medal of Honor, and Need for Speed
  • Full game download performance will increase in the future
  • 100 million in mobile games, 36 YOY growth
  • Majority of mobile success from 'The Simpsons: Tapped Out'
  • Subscriptions, advertising, Digital Revenue - 79 million (excl. Battlefield Premium)
  • Digital momentum continues to build and we see this as the future.
  • Q4 predictions: Battlefield Premium, FIFA Ultimate Team, Crysis 3, Sim City, Dead Space 3.
  • Q4 challenges: following Holiday softness, significant volatility due to 'console transition'.
  • FUSE delayed to Q1 of fiscal 2014.

    Peter Moore...
  • Distinction between HD consoles vs. SD consoles — both trending down, HD 13% down.
  • EA console titles focused fully on HD.
  • EA had 6 of the top 20 hits of 2012.
  • Clear distinction between winners and losers — in Q3, EA had both.
  • Global revenue for digital services grew 25%.
  • We struggled with slowdown of sector, and poor critical and commercial performance of MOH.
  • Critics polarised.
  • MOH scores "lower than deserved".
  • Consumers didn't respond to 'authenticity' proposition.
  • MOH no longer part of our shooter rotation.
  • FIFA 13 No. 1 in Europe in 2012, outselling Call of Duty.
  • Need for Speed: Most Wanted, up 30% YOY, outperformed other racing titles. Now an annualised blockbuster.
  • Battlefield in a position to become a top franchise in the industry.
  • Bejeweled Blitz, Simpsons Tapped Out coming to Android.
  • Dead Space 3, demo generated 44% more downloads than Dead Space 2 demo on Xbox 360.
  • Crysis 3 pre-orders 40% higher than Crysis 2.
  • SimCity critical reception shaping up well.
  • Real Racing 3 launches Feb 28
  • Tiger Woods March 28, Army of Two March 29, FUSE Q1 Spring
  • Origin 2 million users registered in January.
  • Fiscal 14 ushering in a new era of gaming.

    Q&A - John Riccitiello, Frank Gibeau, Peter Moore

    Q: Medal of Honor: what drove performance, what steps can you take to prevent a repeat, comment on YOY continuity of FPS titles.
    A: In a hit driven business, about what you can build, we missed on MOH and take responsibility. We released 11 games scoring 80+, delivered 90% titles on time. MOH overshadows this, but we're proud of our teams overall. As for shooters, Battlefield is coming.

    Q: Marketing expense increased, is this sustainable thinking of things going forward? Also, you talk about recurring franchises (now that Medal of Honor is out of the picture) — FIFA and Battlefield make up the majority of profits, as you move into next-gen, what changes?
    A: Trend driven by titles and activity in the quarter. A lot of work is done to get the most out of each marketing dollar, conscious of what to spend and when. Hold off on putting trends in your models going forward, but we're working to drive it down. We want to maintain a smaller selection of titles going forward.

    We want to build around franchises, like Battlefield and FIFA. We try to build profitability by developing a long digital life, e.g. Battlefield Premium, FIFA Ultimate Team, across multiple devices. All of that can be monetized and helps drive profitability as opposed to a single boxed title.

    We believe that FIFA and Battlefield can remain in the top 5, possibly 1 and 2, as we move into the technology transition we see coming. They will help lead this transition and continue to get bigger. They are vitally important to us, but not at the expense of our other franchises.

    Q: You're facing headwind following late state of console cycle, a lot is out of your control at the moment, people are expecting well selling new consoles. If new consoles are not competitive, what is your 'Plan B'? Does it involve other platforms that are gaining penetration? Are you preparing for this?
    A: The data on game usage is clear. We have added gamers to the universe of paying game customers. There is no slowdown. Substantial digital growth — 37% growth in last 12 months. Digital is a valuable part of our business. Driven by a great talent base. We have great talent and a great business. We know exactly what's coming and we know more than what's disclosed to consumers and investors. Plan A: explode with opportunities we see on console. We have high confidence.

    Q: What is driving digital growth?
    A: Full game downloads are PC centric, like Battlefield, a substantial title, bigger than anything else in this quarter — drove full game downloads in this quarter. See the slides for further illustration on this. Almost all of this is driven by Battlefield and Star Wars.

    Q: Should we assume next quarter to be bigger?
    A: Take Battlefield Premium. 108 million will drop into 4Q, minimum. Down to last expansion pack in the series, so it might trend down a little bit. One thing to keep in mind, most cost for developing product were incurred as quarters went along, so that revenue will be at a high gross margin as it comes into 4Q.

    Q: Wii U — you're not pursing aggressively. What does this say about consumers adopting next-generation consoles in the future?
    A: Never count Nintendo out. They have great IP. You will see a bounce when they bring these IPs out. We see no correlation between Wii U sales and what we expect from other next-gen consoles, can't talk a lot about that though. What we describe as "Gen 4" is yet to come. We're excited and investing in it.

    Q: Any softness around FPS/M-rated games/Gun Club following recent events? View on media/political focus?
    A: We didn't want to answer this question. We're not seeing softness in FPS sector. We have an advantage at EA, sharing with ESRB and ESA, being exposed to Washington. We're a responsible industry and confident in our content not having a link to violence. We were stunned and horrified by the violence in Connecticut and Colorado. There's been an enormous amount of research into links, nobody's found anything. Supreme Court concluded that we deserve all 1st Amended Right freedoms, following agreement with evidence in multiple studies. We understand that there may not be an actual problem, there is a perception to wrestle with. We want to be part of the solution. Our media reaches many Americans and can be used as a voice for good. We don't want to be the butt of the joke. We're ready to step up.

    Q: Mid-core genre for Mobile. Where you guys at?
    A: Real Racing is coming, other titles planned going forward. Big believers in audience.

    Q: Plants vs Zombies 2?
    A: Nothing to announce, great plan for Pop Cap going forward to expand franchise.

    Q: Valve introduced Steam Box at CES, uncertainty around Sony and Microsoft. Could Valve be a player?
    A: John is "in the Gabe Newell fan club". He's a big fan of their content, Portal is his all time favourite. Having said that, Valve hasn't said much about their plans. Large scale success usually goes with multiple billions of investment in development, online relationships, retail, manufacturing, supply, etc... Based on what Valve has said so far, it could be a nice niche product for Valve fans. They need to reveal more about their plans.

    Q: Learnings from Simpsons: Tapped Out? What techniques can you apply to other IP?
    A: Simpsons IP great opportunity for us, in regard to episodic content, e.g. Treehouse of Horrors. At its core, it's a hilarious game.

    Q: What is driving Q4 predictions?
    A: Most analysts expecting big quarter, following Assassin's Creed 3, Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Halo 4, Need for Speed, Madden, FIFA. Despite great games well marketed, quarter was weaker than we anticipated going in. Often happens when consumers expect a console transition. Sales are down and erratic. We're about to launch the 1st of 3 packaged goods title that will define our quarter. We know we've got a fast boat, we just don't know how deep the water is. We think the content's great, we're anxious about the sector a bit.

    Q: Battlefield. Are you dropping Medal of Honor and annualising Battlefield?
    A: We're not announcing an annualisation of Battlefield today. We're releasing a new Battlefield title next year and we'll talk more about it soon.

    Q: Digital: What's working and what's not working? Are there areas you're rethinking?
    A: Mobile is working for us in addition to digital downloads for full games and PDLC, like Battlefield Premium and FIFA Ultimate Team. Bunch of F2P models are working well for us. FIFA in Korea and Japan are F2P and are working well. Premium and F2P across mobile, PC and console are working well for us. Absent is social. Social has not down well for us. We have the IP we need and the channel access we need. We can lead digital with great execution in Asia, following western success. Added strength following PopCap acquisition. We have a great hand. We like what we've got and we're not looking to drop.

And we're done!
 

Quentyn

Member
They will discuss the next Battlefield and Fifa at the next call in May.

Initial impressions for the Star Wars are positive
 

RoKKeR

Member
WOW at those Premium numbers. Has to have surpassed their expectations. Good for them, I think Premium is a great thing for fans if the game.

Expect it to return for BF4.

Pre-orders tracking ahead of their respective sequels for Crysis and Dead Space is interesting as well.
 

params7

Banned
Fifa dlc generated more revenue than the game itself. Can't blame them for bringing the model to non-Ea Sports games now.
 

Stumpokapow

listen to the mad man
Have they mentioned what, if anything, Popcap is doing besides sitting on their thumbs? They were enormously productive, got bought by EA, produced basically nothing since, and have downsized a bunch.

I mean, not that I don't like my Conehead Zombie action figure, but I'd rather, you know, an actual new game.

Edit: Looks like they haven't released a game since Bejeweled 3 in Fall 2010.
 

Fladam

Member
Have they mentioned what, if anything, Popcap is doing besides sitting on their thumbs? They were enormously productive, got bought by EA, produced basically nothing since, and have downsized a bunch.

I mean, not that I don't like my Conehead Zombie action figure, but I'd rather, you know, an actual new game.

This X1000. Especially since 4th and Battery has gone silent since the purchase too.
 
This bodes well for my theory that Danger Close is making Bad Company 3 given how much Bad Company staff they have.

this would be too awesome.

This should've been the direction they've taken from the start. Aping CoD isn't working for them.

Hopefully, if BC3 is what they'll be moving to, they build it to be more sandboxy like BC1 with the addition of 4 player co-op through the campaign.
 

Nirolak

Mrgrgr
Have they mentioned what, if anything, Popcap is doing besides sitting on their thumbs? They were enormously productive, got bought by EA, produced basically nothing since, and have downsized a bunch.

I mean, not that I don't like my Conehead Zombie action figure, but I'd rather, you know, an actual new game.

PvZ2 is supposed to come in the Spring and Black Box PopCap Canada is rumored to be making a PvZ style TF2 game.
 

Crawl

Member
So it sounds like no more medal of honor according to the conference call. I wonder what they will replace it with? Some sort of BF expansion? or new ip?
 

Quentyn

Member
Riccitiello says there is a sharp distinction between Wii U and the next consoles. What they call Gen 4 is still to come.
 

AHA-Lambda

Member
WOAH so is MoH now dead?? :O

Critics polarised.
MOH scores "lower than deserved".
Consumers didn't respond to 'authenticity' proposition.
MOH no longer part of our shooter rotation.

........

FIFA 13 No. 1 in Europe in 2012, outselling Call of Duty.

wow...wow!
 

Saty

Member
So is no one going to ask EA about ME3\FIFA performance on the wii u?

Ricitello is in 'Gabe Newell's fan club'.
 

EatChildren

Currently polling second in Australia's federal election (first in the Gold Coast), this feral may one day be your Bogan King.
Q: Wii U — you're not pursing aggressively. What does this say about consumers adopting next-generation consoles in the future?
A: Never count Nintendo out. They have great IP. You will see a bounce when they bring these IPs out. We see no correlation between Wii U sales and what we expect from other next-gen consoles, can't talk a lot about that though. What we describe as "Gen 4" is yet to come. We're excited and investing in it.

Fucking lol.
 

iMax

Member
Webcast Notes - I'll try and update as it goes along...

  • Consumers are behaving in a way reflective of a console transition
  • Console transitions are difficult, initiate periods of strong growth, represent significant opportunity
  • Working on new Battlefield and FIFA titles
  • Medal of Honor performed well below our expectations
  • Strong performance from FIFA, Need for Speed
  • NHL performance down
  • Packaged goods up $16 million, following FIFA/Battlefield 3
  • Strong Digital Performance
  • Deferring Battlefield Premium revenue of 15% to following quarter
  • 44 million full-game downloads
  • Majority of Q3 digital revenue came from FIFA, Medal of Honor, and Need for Speed
  • Full game download performance will increase in the future
  • 100 million in mobile games, 36 YOY growth
  • Majority of mobile success from 'The Simpsons: Tapped Out'
  • Subscriptions, advertising, Digital Revenue - 79 million (excl. Battlefield Premium)
  • Digital momentum continues to build and we see this as the future.
  • Q4 predictions: Battlefield Premium, FIFA Ultimate Team, Crysis 3, Sim City, Dead Space 3.
  • Q4 challenges: following Holiday softness, significant volatility due to 'console transition'.
  • FUSE delayed to Q1 of fiscal 2014.

    Peter Moore...
  • Distinction between HD consoles vs. SD consoles — both trending down, HD 13% down.
  • EA console titles focused fully on HD.
  • EA had 6 of the top 20 hits of 2012.
  • Clear distinction between winners and losers — in Q3, EA had both.
  • Global revenue for digital services grew 25%.
  • We struggled with slowdown of sector, and poor critical and commercial performance of MOH.
  • Critics polarised.
  • MOH scores "lower than deserved".
  • Consumers didn't respond to 'authenticity' proposition.
  • MOH no longer part of our shooter rotation.
  • FIFA 13 No. 1 in Europe in 2012, outselling Call of Duty.
  • Need for Speed: Most Wanted, up 30% YOY, outperformed other racing titles. Now an annualised blockbuster.
  • Battlefield in a position to become a top franchise in the industry.
  • Bejeweled Blitz, Simpsons Tapped Out coming to Android.
  • Dead Space 3, demo generated 44% more downloads than Dead Space 2 demo on Xbox 360.
  • Crysis 3 pre-orders 40% higher than Crysis 2.
  • SimCity critical reception shaping up well.
  • Real Racing 3 launches Feb 28
  • Tiger Woods March 28, Army of Two March 29, FUSE Q1 Spring
  • Origin 2 million users registered in January.
  • Fiscal 14 ushering in a new era of gaming.

    Q&A - John Riccitiello, Frank Gibeau, Peter Moore

    Q: Medal of Honor: what drove performance, what steps can you take to prevent a repeat, comment on YOY continuity of FPS titles.
    A: In a hit driven business, about what you can build, we missed on MOH and take responsibility. We released 11 games scoring 80+, delivered 90% titles on time. MOH overshadows this, but we're proud of our teams overall. As for shooters, Battlefield is coming.

    Q: Marketing expense increased, is this sustainable thinking of things going forward? Also, you talk about recurring franchises (now that Medal of Honor is out of the picture) — FIFA and Battlefield make up the majority of profits, as you move into next-gen, what changes?
    A: Trend driven by titles and activity in the quarter. A lot of work is done to get the most out of each marketing dollar, conscious of what to spend and when. Hold off on putting trends in your models going forward, but we're working to drive it down. We want to maintain a smaller selection of titles going forward.

    We want to build around franchises, like Battlefield and FIFA. We try to build profitability by developing a long digital life, e.g. Battlefield Premium, FIFA Ultimate Team, across multiple devices. All of that can be monetized and helps drive profitability as opposed to a single boxed title.

    We believe that FIFA and Battlefield can remain in the top 5, possibly 1 and 2, as we move into the technology transition we see coming. They will help lead this transition and continue to get bigger. They are vitally important to us, but not at the expense of our other franchises.

    Q: You're facing headwind following late state of console cycle, a lot is out of your control at the moment, people are expecting well selling new consoles. If new consoles are not competitive, what is your 'Plan B'? Does it involve other platforms that are gaining penetration? Are you preparing for this?
    A: The data on game usage is clear. We have added gamers to the universe of paying game customers. There is no slowdown. Substantial digital growth — 37% growth in last 12 months. Digital is a valuable part of our business. Driven by a great talent base. We have great talent and a great business. We know exactly what's coming and we know more than what's disclosed to consumers and investors. Plan A: explode with opportunities we see on console. We have high confidence.

    Q: What is driving digital growth?
    A: Full game downloads are PC centric, like Battlefield, a substantial title, bigger than anything else in this quarter — drove full game downloads in this quarter. See the slides for further illustration on this. Almost all of this is driven by Battlefield and Star Wars.

    Q: Should we assume next quarter to be bigger?
    A: Take Battlefield Premium. 108 million will drop into 4Q, minimum. Down to last expansion pack in the series, so it might trend down a little bit. One thing to keep in mind, most cost for developing product were incurred as quarters went along, so that revenue will be at a high gross margin as it comes into 4Q.

    Q: Wii U — you're not pursing aggressively. What does this say about consumers adopting next-generation consoles in the future?
    A: Never count Nintendo out. They have great IP. You will see a bounce when they bring these IPs out. We see no correlation between Wii U sales and what we expect from other next-gen consoles, can't talk a lot about that though. What we describe as "Gen 4" is yet to come. We're excited and investing in it.

    Q: Any softness around FPS/M-rated games/Gun Club following recent events? View on media/political focus?
    A: We didn't want to answer this question. We're not seeing softness in FPS sector. We have an advantage at EA, sharing with ESRB and ESA, being exposed to Washington. We're a responsible industry and confident in our content not having a link to violence. We were stunned and horrified by the violence in Connecticut and Colorado. There's been an enormous amount of research into links, nobody's found anything. Supreme Court concluded that we deserve all 1st Amended Right freedoms, following agreement with evidence in multiple studies. We understand that there may not be an actual problem, there is a perception to wrestle with. We want to be part of the solution. Our media reaches many Americans and can be used as a voice for good. We don't want to be the butt of the joke. We're ready to step up.

    Q: Mid-core genre for Mobile. Where you guys at?
    A: Real Racing is coming, other titles planned going forward. Big believers in audience.

    Q: Plants vs Zombies 2?
    A: Nothing to announce, great plan for Pop Cap going forward to expand franchise.

    Q: Valve introduced Steam Box at CES, uncertainty around Sony and Microsoft. Could Valve be a player?
    A: John is "in the Gabe Newell fan club". He's a big fan of their content, Portal is his all time favourite. Having said that, Valve hasn't said much about their plans. Large scale success usually goes with multiple billions of investment in development, online relationships, retail, manufacturing, supply, etc... Based on what Valve has said so far, it could be a nice niche product for Valve fans. They need to reveal more about their plans.

    Q: Learnings from Simpsons: Tapped Out? What techniques can you apply to other IP?
    A: Simpsons IP great opportunity for us, in regard to episodic content, e.g. Treehouse of Horrors. At its core, it's a hilarious game.

    Q: What is driving Q4 predictions?
    A: Most analysts expecting big quarter, following Assassin's Creed 3, Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Halo 4, Need for Speed, Madden, FIFA. Despite great games well marketed, quarter was weaker than we anticipated going in. Often happens when consumers expect a console transition. Sales are down and erratic. We're about to launch the 1st of 3 packaged goods title that will define our quarter. We know we've got a fast boat, we just don't know how deep the water is. We think the content's great, we're anxious about the sector a bit.

    Q: Battlefield. Are you dropping Medal of Honor and annualising Battlefield?
    A: We're not announcing an annualisation of Battlefield today. We're releasing a new Battlefield title next year and we'll talk more about it soon.

    Q: Digital: What's working and what's not working? Are there areas you're rethinking?
    A: Mobile is working for us in addition to digital downloads for full games and PDLC, like Battlefield Premium and FIFA Ultimate Team. Bunch of F2P models are working well for us. FIFA in Korea and Japan are F2P and are working well. Premium and F2P across mobile, PC and console are working well for us. Absent is social. Social has not down well for us. We have the IP we need and the channel access we need. We can lead digital with great execution in Asia, following western success. Added strength following PopCap acquisition. We have a great hand. We like what we've got and we're not looking to drop.

And we're done!

Webcast just finished.
 
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