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Video games in Poland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Poland is a major video game market and home to one of the largestvideo game industries in the world. In 2022, Poland became the world’s fourth largest exporter of video games,[1] and Polish publicly traded gaming companies were worth over €12 billion.[2] The game studios in the country employ around 10,000 people and release almost 500 new games annually.[3]

CD Projekt, developer ofThe Witcher franchise, includingThe Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – one of thebest-selling video games of all time, as well asCyberpunk 2077, is based in Poland.[4] A significant portion of the Polish population plays video games,[5] and Poland is the home to a developingesports market. In 2019, owing to the industry's growing importance in the country, theWarsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) dedicated an index to it, the WIG Games Index, as part of the exchange’s strategy to attract technology companies. By the end of 2020, the number of gaming companies listed on the WSE had risen to 54, the most in the world, surpassing the previous leader, theTokyo Stock Exchange.[6]

Market

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2018Intel Extreme Masters in Katowice

As of 2021, 97% of spending on video games in Poland is spent on foreign titles.[7] The Polish gaming market was valued about US$924.2 million in 2020, with an esports market valued at US$11.5 million.[8] Of game localizations onSteam, Polish typically ranks between the 9th or 10th most popular language of localization. There are 20 million video game players in Poland; of this group, over 80% are adults and about 49% are women.[9]

The Polish video game market has been described as emerging from the practice of trading pirated video games as a way of experiencing western culture under thePolish People's Republic.[10] Poland hosts the esports tournamentIntel Extreme Masters, which draws hundreds of millions of viewers.[10] Among Polish citizens interested in esports,FIFA,League of Legends, andCounter-Strike were the most popular games as of 2020.[11] Notable esports players from Poland includeCounter-Strike playerNEO andQuake playerAv3k.

Development

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As of 2021, 96% of revenue in the Polish gaming industry comes from exporting video games to foreign countries, and the Polish gaming industry employed 12,110 people across 470 game companies.[12] The largest video game company in Poland is CD Projekt.[13] CD Projekt is most well known for developingaction role-playing games, such asThe Witcher video game series andCyberpunk 2077. CD Projekt also operates the global video game distribution platformGOG.com.[14] In 2019, Poland was the largest video game exporter in Europe and the fourth largest in the world, largely due to the success ofThe Witcher.[15] The Polish government has invested into the country's video game industry and sees it as a vehicle for growth. Heavy emphasis on math in the Polish school curriculum has also been credited for the success of Poland's video game industry.[10][16]

Important early Polish video games developed in the 1990s includeTajemnica Statuetki (The Mystery of the Figurine),Teenagent,The Prince and the Coward andGorky 17 byMetropolis Software as well asMortyr by Mirage Media.

As the Polishgaming industry started to rapidly grow over the course of next decades, a number of Polish video game studios have developed video games to international acclaim.Flying Wild Hog is the developer ofHard Reset, theShadow Warrior series,Trek to Yomi andEvil West.Techland was the developer ofCall of Juarez,Dead Island,Dead Island: Riptide,Dying Light andDying Light 2.People Can Fly is the developer ofPainkiller,Bulletstorm,Gears of War: Judgement andOutriders.The Astronauts is the developer ofThe Vanishing of Ethan Carter andWitchfire.One More Level is the developer ofGhostrunner andGhostrunner 2.Reikon Games developedRuiner andMetal Eden.Teyon developedRoboCop: Rogue City.SUPERHOT Team madeSuperhot.Gruby Entertainment madeDeadlink.Bloober Team has developed severalhorror games, includingLayers of Fear,Blair Witch,The Medium,Observer andSilent Hill 2.Ten Square Games has developed several successfulmobile games.CI Games is the developer of theSniper: Ghost Warrior franchise including such games asSniper Ghost Warrior 3 andSniper Ghost Warrior Contracts 2.Reality Pump developedTwo Worlds II.The Farm 51 is the developer ofNecroVisioN,Painkiller: Hell & Damnation and thescience fictionsurvival video gameChernobylite. Destructive Creations developed anisometricshoot 'em up video gameHatred.

11 Bit Studios was the developer ofThis War of Mine,Frostpunk, with its sequelFrostpunk 2 andThe Alters. The Polish government placedThis War of Mine on the official school reading list in 2020, making it the first video game to be put on such a list by a national government.[16][17] The Polish game development industry has been praised for contributing to and spreading Poland's cultural heritage.[18][19]

Notable Polish video games

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This is a list of notable video games that were primarily developed in Poland and sold at least one million units.

TitleRelease dateDeveloperRef
Against the StormDecember 8, 2023Eremite Games[20]
Cyberpunk 2077December 10, 2020CD Projekt Red[21]
Dead IslandSeptember 6, 2011Techland[22]
Dying LightJanuary 27, 2015[23]
Dying Light 2February 4, 2022[23]
FrostpunkApril 24, 201811 Bit Studios[24]
Frostpunk 2September 20, 2024[25]
Gears of War: JudgmentMarch 19, 2013People Can Fly[26]
Green HellSeptember 5, 2019Creepy Jar[27]
GhostrunnerOctober 27, 2020One More Level,Slipgate Ironworks[28]
House FlipperMay 17, 2018Red Dot Games, Empyrean Games[29]
Manor LordsApril 26, 2024 (EA)Slavic Magic[30]
OutridersApril 1, 2021People Can Fly[31]
Sniper Ghost Warrior 3April 25, 2017CI Games[32]
SuperhotFebruary 25, 2016SuperHot Team[33]
Superhot VRDecember 5, 2016[34]
The Vanishing of Ethan CarterSeptember 26, 2014The Astronauts[35]
This War of MineNovember 14, 201411 Bit Studios[19]
The WitcherOctober 26, 2007CD Projekt Red[36]
The Witcher 2: Assassins of KingsMay 17, 2011[37]
The Witcher 3: Wild HuntMay 19, 2015[21]
TimberbornSeptember 15, 2021Mechanistry[38]

Video game companies of Poland

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Developers

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Misc

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  • Dream Machines sp. z o.o. (Gaming peripherals maker)

Co-development

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  • Mataboo sp. z o.o (Dev, co-dev, porting)
  • Black Drakkar Games sp. z o.o (Dev, co-dev)
  • Roboto Sound (Ex-Studio Sound Tropez Sp. z o.o. in 2008-2020)
  • VRAAR S.A. (Dev, co-dev (VR/AR))

Defunct developers

[edit]
  • Alien Artefact Team (2002-2003. Worked with Mirage Interactive.)
  • Can't Stop Games (Founded 2007. Defunct in 2013. Online games.)[39][40]
  • Detalion (defunct 2005. Not same as 2018's Detalion Games S.A.)
  • Metropolis Software (Founded 1992. Defunct 2009.)
  • Mirage Media S. C. (Founded 1988. Defunct 2000. Not same as Swedish dev, "Mirage Game Studios".)
  • Shortbreak Studios s.c. (Founded 2013. Defunct 2016. Mostly mobile.)
  • Twin Bottles (Founded 2006? Inactive 2016. Website down 2018. Former publisher.)[41]

Publishers

[edit]
  • Anshar Publishing Sp. z o.o. (Publishing arm of Anshar Studios)
  • BoomHits (Mainly mobile & casual. Part of BoomBit Group.)
  • Feardemic Sp. z o.o. (Publishing arm of Bloober Team)
  • Games Operators S.A.

Publisher and development firms

[edit]

Defunct publishers

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  • California Dreams (Founded 1987. Defunct 1991.)
  • Codeminion (Founded 2000. Closed 2020. Publisher & dev: core & casual games.)
  • PLAY Sp. z o.o. (Founded 1994. Ceased game publishing after 2017. Ex-"Play.pl" in 2001 to 2007; also "PLAY-publishing.com" in 2004-2017. Its CFO later founded PlayWay.)
  • Black Eye Games (Founded 2012. Closed 2023.)

High-volume firms

[edit]

Otherwise colloquially known as 'Assembly factories' of the industry. These firms have the record and reputation of making and/or releasing/publishing one to many game titles per year, which can lead to dilution of their quality or highly variable results. Some of them likePlayWay particularly like to make numerous life/job simulation games.[43][44] Some others likeForever Entertainment also make many console ports, including remakes, but not exclusively.[45][46]

  • Gaming Factory S.A.

Publisher and development firms

[edit]
  • Art Games Studio S.A.
  • Atomic Jelly
  • Drago Entertainment
  • Forestlight Games
  • Forever Entertainment (Publisher, dev & porting)
  • Live Motion Games SA
  • Movie Games S.A. (Publisher & former dev)
  • PlayWay S.A. (Founder previously was CFO at then-defunct PLAY Sp. z.o.o.)
    • Ultimate Games S.A.
      • Manager Games S.A.
      • SIG Publishing (Smaller budget & lower rated titles under Ultimate Games)

See also

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References

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  1. ^Léo Portal (25 May 2022)."Video games in Poland: a strong and evolving industry".blue-europe.eu. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  2. ^Borys Musielak (8 December 2020)."Mapping the Polish Game Industry".michuk.medium.com. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  3. ^Nikola Đorđević (15 February 2021)."Taking gaming seriously has paid off for Poland".emerging-europe.com. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  4. ^Nhx Tingson (21 May 2020)."CD Projekt Surpasses Ubisoft as Europe's Most Valuable Game Company; Devs Talk About The Witcher 3's Open World Success".techtimes.com. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  5. ^"Poland is Leading the Way of Gaming Industry. How?".study.gov.pl. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  6. ^Nikola Đorđević (14 October 2020)."Why gaming is set to become Poland's national brand".emerging-europe.com. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  7. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, p. 7.
  8. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, p. 37.
  9. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, pp. 38–39.
  10. ^abcKoper, Anna; Kahn, Michael (2020-01-23)."From Communist-era roots to cash cows: Poland's gaming industry takes on the world".Reuters. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  11. ^"The most popular eSports games in Poland".Polish Gamers Observatory. 2021-01-19. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  12. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, pp. 7–8.
  13. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, p. 10.
  14. ^Rutkowski, Marszałkowski & Biedermann 2021, p. 21.
  15. ^Kraków, Kafkadesk (2019-10-29)."Poland is now fourth largest exporter of video games in the world".Kafkadesk. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  16. ^abĐorđević, Nikola (2020-10-14)."Taking gaming seriously has paid off for Poland".Emerging Europe. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  17. ^Tilles, Daniel (2020-06-18)."Poland puts computer game "This War of Mine" on school reading list".Notes From Poland. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  18. ^Lewandowski, Marcin (2020-12-22)."Poland's thriving video game industry is ready to step out of CD Projekt's shadow".Notes From Poland. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  19. ^abĐorđević, Nikola (2021-02-15)."Why video gaming is set to become Poland's national cultural brand".Emerging Europe. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  20. ^Ken Allsop (March 27, 2024).""Near-perfect" dark fantasy city builder hits a million sales on Steam".PCGamesN.Network N. Archived fromthe original on April 3, 2024. RetrievedApril 19, 2024.
  21. ^abLeBlanc, Wesley."The Witcher 3 Has Sold More Than 40 Million Copies, Cyberpunk 2077 Surpasses 18 Million".Game Informer.Archived from the original on April 14, 2022. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  22. ^Pitts, Russ (16 July 2014)."From Dead Island to Dying Light".Polygon. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  23. ^ab"Dying Light 2: Stay Human sales top five million in one month; Dying Light 1 tops 20 million".Gematsu. 2022-04-22. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  24. ^Taylor, Haydn."Frostpunk sells 1.4m units in first year".GameIndustry.biz. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  25. ^"Polish survival video game Frostpunk 2 predicted to be global success".TVP World.Telewizja Polska. September 21, 2024. Archived fromthe original on September 20, 2024. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2024.
  26. ^"How Epic's buyout freed People Can Fly to bring straight-up shooters into the 21st century".Edge. August 13, 2013. Archived fromthe original on August 15, 2013. RetrievedMarch 27, 2023.
  27. ^cdaction.pl (June 24, 2020)."Green Hell: Sprzedano już milion sztuk polskiego survivala".Archived from the original on October 17, 2020. RetrievedMarch 27, 2023.
  28. ^Sal Romano (September 3, 2023)."Ghostrunner sales top 2.5 million".Gematsu. Archived fromthe original on November 19, 2023. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2024.
  29. ^Milosz Szubert (May 14, 2021)."House Flipper Reports Great Sales Figures".www.gamepressure.com. Gamepressure. Archived fromthe original on June 21, 2021. RetrievedNovember 22, 2023.
  30. ^Alex Calvin (April 29, 2024)."Manor Lords sold 1m copies on first day on sale".PC Games Insider.Steel Media. Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2024. RetrievedMay 7, 2024.
  31. ^Prescott, Shaun (May 20, 2021)."More Outriders games are likely thanks to 3.5 million players milestone".PC Gamer. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  32. ^Franzese, Tomas (16 February 2018)."Sniper Ghost Warrior 3 Surpasses 1 Million Copies Sold as CI Games is Significantly Downsized".Dualshockers. Retrieved27 March 2023.
  33. ^Taylor, Ivy (2019-05-28)."Superhot passes two million lifetime sales".GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  34. ^Hayden, Scott (2021-02-25)."'Superhot VR' on Quest Surpasses 1 Million Units Sold, Quest 2 Sales Outperform All Platforms".Road to VR. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  35. ^"Our new game, Witchfire".The Astronauts blog. December 8, 2017. RetrievedMarch 27, 2023.
  36. ^Lee, James (2008-10-31)."The Witcher hits 1 million sales".GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  37. ^Dutton, Fred (30 May 2012)."The Witcher 2 sales top 1.7 million".Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  38. ^"Timberborn celebrates its second anniversary and 1,000,000 copies sold with a new trailer".mechanistry.com. September 14, 2023. Retrieved2024-03-28.
  39. ^"Can't Stop Games' official website".www.cantstopgames.com. Archived fromthe original on December 22, 2021. RetrievedOctober 7, 2024.
  40. ^"Can't Stop Games' Twitter feed".Twitter.Archived from the original on March 22, 2014. RetrievedOctober 7, 2024.
  41. ^"Twin Bottles' official website".www.twinbottles.com. Archived fromthe original on September 26, 2018. RetrievedOctober 7, 2024.
  42. ^"Aidem Media's official website".www.aidemmedia.pl. Archived fromthe original on March 31, 2018. RetrievedNovember 29, 2023.
  43. ^Michael Thomsen (November 13, 2021)."The Polish Simulator Company Gamers Love to Hate".Wired (manager).Condé Nast. Archived fromthe original on December 5, 2022. RetrievedNovember 22, 2023.
  44. ^Evgeny Obedkov (April 5, 2023)."Game World Observer's publications for PlayWay".Game World Observer. WN Media Group FZ-LLC. Archived fromthe original on November 23, 2023. RetrievedNovember 23, 2023.
  45. ^Ollie Reynolds (September 14, 2022)."Why Settle For One 'Front Mission' Remake When You Can Have Three?".Nintendo Life.Gamer Network. Archived fromthe original on October 1, 2022. RetrievedNovember 22, 2023.
  46. ^Brian Richards (July 22, 2023)."Forever Entertainment teases new remake announcement for 2023".nintendoeverything.com. Nintendo Everything. Archived fromthe original on August 1, 2023. RetrievedNovember 22, 2023.

Bibliography

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Poland articles
History
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Symbols
Video games in Europe
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External links

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