Activision Blizzard's popular MMO
World of Warcraft is continuing to shed subscribers, though a new promotional strategy is expected to help pick up the slack soon.
As of September 30, the game stood at 10.3 million players, Blizzard CEO
Mike Morhaime revealed Tuesday in a Gamasutra-attended conference call.
This is down nearly a million from the 11.1 million
reported three months prior, and significantly less than a peak of 12 million subscribers just last year.
According to Morhaime, the majority of these declines continues to come
from the East, though the game continues to be "one of the most popular
online games in China, and remains by far the most popular
subscription-based MMO in the world."
"That said, we know there are improvements that we can make in game content," he continued.
As the company has been explaining for most of the year, subscriber churn following the game's last major expansion,
Cataclysm,
was significant: the game lost nearly 1 million players, as seasoned
veterans of the game re-upped their accounts, devoured the content
quickly, and unsubscribed again.
The company has a content update pack launching in the coming weeks, but
as Morhaime explained today, "it's really not intended to go out and
drive new user acquisition, that's a whole other strategy. But it does
drive engagement with the game, and so that will impact churn if we do
it successfully, and will eventually drive winback, as players tell each
other about the content they're enjoying."
Besides the game's upcoming fourth expansion pack,
Mists of Pandaria, subscriber count -- not to mention retention -- is expected to increase with a
recently-announced promotion that sees free copies of the company's upcoming
Diablo III included with the purchase of an annual pass to the game.