Square Enix sees game sales drop, but multiplatform strategy continues in earnest

Square Enix is continuing with its multiplatform strategy, despite a drop in sales of its games.

Its latest financial report shows a year-on-year drop in sales of its single player games, although profit was up due to the sales of Dragon Quest 3 HD-2D Remake which were “stronger… than initially assumed”.

The likes of Visions of Mana, Fantasian Neo Dimension, and Life is Strange: Double Exposure, among others, could not compete with previous releases Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, Final Fantasy 16, or the Final Fantasy Pixel Remasters.

Predictably, sales and profits of the company’s MMOs have increased, notably due to the release of Final Fantasy 14 expansion Dawntrail last summer. Further, sales and profits of mobile games have dropped “sharply” as the company has closed many of its games.

Indeed, it announced today the cancellation of mobile game Kingdom Hearts Missing-Link.

Overall, then, the digital entertainment sector has seen an 18 percent drop in sales, but 28 percent increase in operating income.

However, Square Enix is in the midst of a “three-year reboot for long-term growth”, which began last year when CEO Takashi Kiryu announced the company was “aggressively pursuing” a multiplatform strategy, including “Nintendo platforms, PlayStation, Xbox, and PCs”.

So far, year-on-year sales of PC games have doubled – in the past year, previously console exclusives like Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth and Final Fantasy 16 have been released on PC.

It seems Switch 2 will also be important for the company. Final Fantasy 7 Remake will be out this year (and seemingly the full remake series), while Bravely Default Flying Fairy HD Remaster will be out at launch. Could other games be ported over too?