Virtual sales provide aid to poorer nations
Flying mounts and other items can be expensive in World of Warcraft and other games
Continue reading the main story
Up
to 100,000 people in China and Vietnam are playing online games to
gather gold and other items for sale to Western players, a report
suggests.
The global market for such virtual game goods is worth at least $3bn (£1.8bn) the World Bank study estimates.
About 75% of that comes from so-called "gold farmers" who stockpile game currencies to sell on later.
Encouraging these in-game services could aid development in many poorer countries, said the report.
Virtual farms
Popular online games such as Lineage and World of Warcraft
revolve around the gear that players gather to outfit their characters.
Better equipment makes characters more powerful.
Some of that equipment can be found on monsters, as well as being bought from other players who have found or made it.
Increasingly, the report said,
Western players who have limited time for gaming are buying game cash,
gear and high level characters from people in China and Vietnam that are
paid to play as a job.
About a quarter of all players of massively mutiplayer online
games spend real money on virtual items, suggests the report. Some pay
significant sums, with one player splashing out almost 5,700 euros
(£5,000) on a single account.
This has led to some of the biggest suppliers becoming
substantial businesses, it said, despite the efforts of many game
studios to snuff out a trade that they believe undermines the game.
The largest eight Chinese suppliers of game gold have an
annual turnover of about $10m (£6.1m) each. A further 50-60 firms have
annual revenues of about $1m (£600,000).
Billion dollar business
The most up to date figures for global virtual sales suggests that the market was worth $3bn in 2009.
About 30% of the virtual currency being traded is "hand made"
by human players, said the report; a further 50% comes from "bot farms"
that automatically play the game and 20% is stolen from hacked
accounts.
More cash from game sales returns to producers than from cash crops such as coffee
The supply chain getting the virtual goods to players was very
mature, said the report's authors Dr Vili Lehdonvirta of the University
of Tokyo and Dr Mirko Ernkvist from the University of Gothenburg.
They gave the example of a 100 dollar payment made via Paypal
for game gold. After processing fees, the cash would be split between a
large retailer ($30), a smaller farmer ($45) and the individual ($23)
who had gathered the gold.
Coffee comparison
The high proportion of money from such sales that reaches
those in the country where the work was done might mean that it could
aid development in many nations, said the report which was
co-commissioned by the World Bank and development organisation InfoDev.
It contrasted this situation with that of coffee which was
worth $70bn annually in 2009 but only $5.5bn of that reached nations
that farm coffee beans.
"This suggests that the virtual economy can have a significant impact on local economies despite its modest size," it said.
Flying mounts and other items can be expensive in World of Warcraft and other games
Continue reading the main story
Up
to 100,000 people in China and Vietnam are playing online games to
gather gold and other items for sale to Western players, a report
suggests.
The global market for such virtual game goods is worth at least $3bn (£1.8bn) the World Bank study estimates.
About 75% of that comes from so-called "gold farmers" who stockpile game currencies to sell on later.
Encouraging these in-game services could aid development in many poorer countries, said the report.
Virtual farms
Popular online games such as Lineage and World of Warcraft
revolve around the gear that players gather to outfit their characters.
Better equipment makes characters more powerful.
Some of that equipment can be found on monsters, as well as being bought from other players who have found or made it.
Increasingly, the report said,
Western players who have limited time for gaming are buying game cash,
gear and high level characters from people in China and Vietnam that are
paid to play as a job.
About a quarter of all players of massively mutiplayer online
games spend real money on virtual items, suggests the report. Some pay
significant sums, with one player splashing out almost 5,700 euros
(£5,000) on a single account.
This has led to some of the biggest suppliers becoming
substantial businesses, it said, despite the efforts of many game
studios to snuff out a trade that they believe undermines the game.
The largest eight Chinese suppliers of game gold have an
annual turnover of about $10m (£6.1m) each. A further 50-60 firms have
annual revenues of about $1m (£600,000).
Billion dollar business
The most up to date figures for global virtual sales suggests that the market was worth $3bn in 2009.
About 30% of the virtual currency being traded is "hand made"
by human players, said the report; a further 50% comes from "bot farms"
that automatically play the game and 20% is stolen from hacked
accounts.
More cash from game sales returns to producers than from cash crops such as coffee
The supply chain getting the virtual goods to players was very
mature, said the report's authors Dr Vili Lehdonvirta of the University
of Tokyo and Dr Mirko Ernkvist from the University of Gothenburg.
They gave the example of a 100 dollar payment made via Paypal
for game gold. After processing fees, the cash would be split between a
large retailer ($30), a smaller farmer ($45) and the individual ($23)
who had gathered the gold.
Coffee comparison
The high proportion of money from such sales that reaches
those in the country where the work was done might mean that it could
aid development in many nations, said the report which was
co-commissioned by the World Bank and development organisation InfoDev.
It contrasted this situation with that of coffee which was
worth $70bn annually in 2009 but only $5.5bn of that reached nations
that farm coffee beans.
"This suggests that the virtual economy can have a significant impact on local economies despite its modest size," it said.