Ubisoft has released its financial report for the year ended March 31. Not only the publisher set a new record in terms of sales but it also announced its plans to release more free-to-play games.

Key figures from the report

  • Net bookings (sales) were €2.2 billion, which is up 46.1% from the previous year. The company’s operating income (according to the IFRS accounting standard) was €289.4 million.
  • Digital copies accounted for 71.8% of total sales, while Ubisoft’s back-catalog accounted for 57.5% of total sales.
  • PS4/PS5 accounted for 33% of total sales. PC ranked second (23%), followed by Xbox (21%) and Nintendo Switch (11%). Mobile still generates a very small share for the company, with 8%.

Ubisoft also shared some information about the performance of its biggest franchises. It was a record year for Assassin’s Creed, with its yearly revenue up 50% from the previous record set in 2012-2013. Rainbow Six Siege was in the top 10 most played games of the year, according to the company’s internal estimates. The Division reached 40 million unique players, as Ubisoft plans to expand the franchise with an upcoming mobile game and the F2P title The Division Heartland.

Speaking of free-to-play games, the company announced changes in its strategy during a full-year-earnings call. According to Ubisoft CFO Frederick Duguet, the publisher is moving on from releasing 3-4 premium AAAs a year.

“It is indeed no longer a proper indication of our value creation dynamics,” he said. “For example, our expectation for Just Dance and Riders Republic are consistent with some of the industry’s AAA performers. Additionally, we are building high-end free-to-play games to be trending towards AAA ambitions over the long-term.”

The statement was met with criticism online, as many thought that Ubisoft will release less premium games and focus more on F2P titles. However, Niko Partners analyst Daniel Ahmad thinks that the company just tries to adapt the “Call of Duty model” by delivering F2P games in addition to its premium titles.

Ubisoft’s senior analyst Shonboppin later confirmed it. “I mostly wanted to steer the convo away from ‘F2P games are replacing AAA paid games’ to ‘F2P is going to be an additional way to experience some of these IPs’, and pointed to CoD as a good example of the model,” he wrote, replying to Geoff Keighley on Twitter.

What it means for players is that Ubisoft is going to release more games in general, both F2P and premium AAAs. The company confirmed that Far Cry 6, Rainbow Six Quarantine, and The Division Heartland will be launched in its current fiscal year (ending March 31, 2022). The publisher also plans to expand its portfolio with premium games like Beyond Good & Evil 2 and titles based on Star Wars and Avatar.


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