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AAA (video game industry)

In the video game industry, AAA (pronounced and sometimes written triple-A) is an informal classification used to categorise games produced and distributed by a mid-sized or major publisher, which typically have higher development and marketing budgets than other tiers of games.[1]

Electronic Arts (left) and Ubisoft (Ubisoft Montreal studio shown; right) are examples of AAA companies in the video game industry.

In the mid-2010s, the term "AAA+" was used to describe AAA type games that generated additional revenue over time, in a similar fashion to massively multiplayer online games, by using games-as-a-service methods such as season passes and expansion packs. The similar construction "III" (Triple-I) has also been used to describe high-production-value games in the indie game industry.

History

The term "AAA" began to be used in the late 1990s, when a few development companies started using the expression at gaming conventions in the US.[2] The term was borrowed from the credit industry's bond ratings, where "AAA" bonds represented the safest opportunity most likely to meet their financial goals.[3]

One of the first video games to be produced at a blockbuster or AAA scale was Squaresoft's Final Fantasy VII (1997),[4] which cost an estimated $40–45 million (inflation adjusted $68–76 million) to develop,[5][6] making it the most expensive video game ever produced up until then, with its unprecedented cinematic CGI production values, movie-like presentation, orchestral music, and innovative blend of gameplay with dynamic cinematic camerawork.[7] Its expensive advertisement campaign was also unprecedented for a video game,[8] with a combined production and marketing budget estimated to be $80–145 million (inflation adjusted $129–234 million as of 2020).[9][6] Its production budget record was later surpassed by Sega AM2's Shenmue (1999), estimated to have cost $47–70 million (inflation adjusted $73–109 million as of 2020).[10]

By the seventh generation of video game consoles (late 2000s), AAA game development on the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3 game consoles typically cost in the low tens of millions of dollars ($15m to $20m) for a new game, with some sequels having even higher total budgets – for example Halo 3 is estimated to have had a development cost of $30m, and a marketing budget of $40m.[11] According to a whitepaper published for EA games (Dice Europe), the seventh generation saw a contraction in the number of video game developing houses creating AAA level titles, reducing from an estimated 125 to around 25, but with a roughly corresponding fourfold increase in staffing required for game development.[12]

Triple-A titles produced during the late 1990s and early 2000s brought a shift towards more narrative-driven games that mixed storytelling elements with gameplay. The earlier widespread adoption of optical media from earlier in the 1990s had brought elements like cutscenes, and the advances in real-time 3D graphics in the mid-1990s further drove new ways to present stories; both elements were incorporated into Final Fantasy VII. With larger budgets, developers were able to find new innovative ways to present narrative as a direct part of gameplay rather than interspersed into pre-rendered cutscenes, with Half-Life one of the first of these new narrative games to nearly eliminate cutscenes in favor of interactive storytelling mechanisms.[13][14]

During the seventh generation, AAA (or "blockbuster") games had marketing at a similar level to high-profile films, with television, billboard and newspaper advertising; a corresponding increasing reliance on sequels, reboots, and similarly franchised IP was also seen, in order to minimize risk. Costs at the end of the generation had risen as high as the hundreds of millions of dollars – the estimated cost of Grand Theft Auto V was approximately $265m. The same conditions also drove the growth of the indie game scene at the other end of the development spectrum, where lower costs enabled innovation and risk-taking.[15]

At around the period of transition from seventh to eighth generation of consoles, the cost of AAA development was considered by some to be a threat to the stability of the industry.[16][17] Staffing and costs for eighth generation games increased; at Ubisoft, AAA game development involved 400 to 600 persons for open world games, split across multiple locations and countries.[18] The failure of a single game to meet production costs could lead to the failure of a studio – Radical Entertainment was closed by parent Activision despite selling an estimated one million units on console in a short period after release.[16][19] Triple-A games also began to lose uniqueness and novelty; a common trend were a range of "grey brown" first-person shooters that drew on the popularity of the Medal of Honor and Call of Duty series but did little to advance gameplay improvements.[20][21] Ubisoft game director Alex Hutchinson described the AAA franchise model as potentially harmful, stating he thought it led to either focus group-tested products aimed at maximizing profit, and/or a push towards ever higher graphics fidelity and impact at a cost of depth or gameplay.[22]

The limited risk-taking in the AAA arena and stagnation of new gameplay concepts led to the rise of indie games in the early 2010s, which were seen as more experimental. This also led to the creation of the "AA" market in the industry, larger studios that were not at the scale of AAA developers but had more experience, funding, and other factors to make them distinct from the smaller teams usually associated with indie studios.[21]

AAA game development has been identified as one environment where crunch time and other working pressures that negatively affect employees are particularly evident.[23][24]

Related terms

AAA+

In general use, the term "AAA+" (Triple-A-Plus) may refer to a subset of AAA games that are the highest selling or have the highest production values. However, there are at least two more specific meanings.

The first describes AAA games with additional methods of revenue generation, generally through purchases in addition to the cost of the base game.[25] The desire for profitability has caused publishers to look at alternative revenue models, where players continued to contribute revenue after the initial purchase, either by premium models, DLC, online passes, and other forms of subscription.[17] In the mid 2010s large publishers began a focus on games engineered to have a long tail in terms of revenue from individual consumers, similar to the way MMO games generate income – these included those with expansion or season pass content such as with Destiny, Battlefield, and the Call of Duty series; and those which generated revenue from selling in-game items, sometimes purely cosmetic, such as Overwatch or League of Legends.[25] Titles of this type are sometimes referred to as "AAA+". In 2016, Gameindustry.biz described AAA+ games as products that "combine AAA production values and aesthetics with Software as a Service (SaaS) principles to keep players engaged for months or even years".[26]

AA (Double-A)

"AA" or Double-A games are mid-market video games that typically have some type of professional development though typically outside of the large first-party studios of the major developers; these may be from larger teams of indie developers in addition to larger non-indie studios. Double-A studios tend to range from 50 to 100 people in size.[27] A double-A development studio will typically be backed by a publisher but not fundamentally part of that publisher, and thus have somewhat more freedom to innovate and experiment compared to triple-A studios, though will still be constrained by specific risk-limiting targets and goals from their funding source. Double-A games tend to be priced $10–40 compared to $60–70 (as of 2021) that triple-A games are priced at. Examples of games considered to be double-A titles include PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, DayZ (a key game in the survival game genre), and Among Us.[28]

As of 2022 game publishers and studios that are currently considered to be AA include Devolver Digital, Warhorse Studios, Obsidian Entertainment, Hazelight Studios, and PlatinumGames.[29]

III

"III" (Triple-I) has been used to refer to independently funded ("indie") games that meet an analogous quality level in their field; i.e., indie games that have relatively high budget, scope, and ambition;[30] often the development team includes staff who have experience working on full AAA titles.[31]

Examples of III games include Ancestors: The Humankind Odyssey, Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice, and The Witness.[31]

AAAA

Starting in 2020 leading up to the launch of the PS5 and the Xbox Series X, two studios started using the term AAAA (Quadruple-A) to describe upcoming games in development. Microsoft's studio, The Initiative, is working on its debut title Perfect Dark for Xbox that's self-described as being a AAAA game,[32] while Ubisoft announced Beyond Good and Evil 2 and Skull & Bones would both be AAAA games.[33] Despite the announcements, there is no agreed-upon definition for the term AAAA or what it entails. Olivia Harris of ScreenRant noted in September 2020 that "[t]he term AAAA has been floating around in recent months online, but it hasn't been adopted by the game industry at large," adding that "what a AAAA designation even means is still unclear, as nothing has yet to ascend beyond the scope of a AAA title. With the next generation of consoles releasing later this year, perhaps this new level of technology will usher in a new wave of games beyond the current standard of the industry as it currently stands, or perhaps it's just the latest self-aggrandizing buzzword conjured up to help games stand out in their incredibly competitive field."[33]

Other terms

The console video game industry lacks the equivalent of a B movie, made-for-TV, or direct-to-video scene. However, titles such as Deadly Premonition and Binary Domain have been dubbed "B games" due to developing cult followings or accruing significant amounts of critical praise despite widely acknowledged flaws, with critics often noting that such a game's ambitions in the face of budget limitations add to the game's charm (a trait common among B movies). Games like this are the exception and, when they are not critically well-received, are often referred to as "bargain bin" titles.[17] The term shovelware has also been used to describe games that are quickly made without great care for the quality of the product as to make easy sales to consumers, as a metaphor for shoveling material onto a pile. Licensed video game tie-ins for films often tend to be considered shovelware, for example.[34][35]

See also

References

  1. ^ Steinberg, Scott (2007). The definitive Guide: Videogame Marketing and PR (1st ed.). iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-59543-371-1.
  2. ^ Demaria, Rusel; Wilson, John (2002). High Score!: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games (1st ed.). McGraw-Hill Osborne Media. ISBN 0-07-222428-2.
  3. ^ Bernevega, A; Gekker, A (April 2021). "The Industry of Landlords: Exploring the Assetization of the Triple-A Game". Games and Culture. 17: 47–69. doi:10.1177/15554120211014151.
  4. ^ Parkin, Simon (11 April 2020). "Final Fantasy VII Remake – a triumphant return for Cloud Strife". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Essential 50: Final Fantasy VII". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on July 21, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Final Fantasy 7: An oral history". Polygon. Jan 9, 2017. Retrieved Feb 2, 2018.
  7. ^ Park, Gene (4 April 2020). "Perfecting Final Fantasy 7′s legacy, as told by its creators". The Washington Post. from the original on 8 April 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  8. ^ Packer, Joseph; Stoneman, Ethan (2018). "Video Games and the Death-Denying Illusion of Agency". A Feeling of Wrongness: Pessimistic Rhetoric on the Fringes of Popular Culture. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-08315-5.
  9. ^ Stanton, Rich (June 2, 2013). "Final Fantasy 7 retrospective". Eurogamer. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  10. ^ Diver, Mike (2 May 2015). "Shenmue – discovering the Sega classic 14 years too late". The Guardian. from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  11. ^ Zackariasson, Peter; Wilson, Timothy L., eds. (2012). The Video Game Industry: Formation, Present State, and Future. Routledge. p. 4.
  12. ^ Robinson, Andy (4 July 2013), , ComputerAndVideoGames.com, archived from the original on 8 July 2013
  13. ^ Shirinian, Ara (January 26, 2010). "The Uneasy Merging of Narrative and Gameplay". Gamasutra. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  14. ^ MacGregor, Jody (September 20, 2020). "22 years later, Half-Life's influence is still being felt". PC Gamer. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  15. ^ "Why video games are so expensive to develop", The Economist, 24 September 2014
  16. ^ a b Usher, William (2012), "AAA Games Could Lead to Mainstream Crash", CinemaBlend.com
  17. ^ a b c "The State of Games: State of AAA", Polygon.com, 2 July 2012
  18. ^ Weber, Rachel (28 February 2013), "On Reflections: First interview with the Ubisoft studio's new MD", GamesIndustry.biz
  19. ^ Usher, William (2012), "Radical Entertainment Goes Bust; Prototype Franchise Is No More", CinemaBlend.com
  20. ^ Rath, Robert (November 8, 2012). "The Medal of Honor Curse". Escapist Magazine. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  21. ^ a b Pearce, Dan (July 2, 2021). "Opinion: 'Indie' Has Lost Its Meaning". IGN. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  22. ^ Makuch, Eddie (8 March 2012), , GameSpot, archived from the original on 9 March 2012
  23. ^ Kerr, Chris (7 October 2016), "AAA game dev lifestyle is 'unwinnable,' says veteran game designer Amy Hennig", Gamasutra
  24. ^ Strickland, Derek (22 January 2016), "Ex-Ubisoft dev reveals the grim reality of AAA games development", TweakTown.com
  25. ^ a b Fahey, Rob (25 November 2016), "Weak AAA launches are a precursor to industry transition", GamesIndustry.biz
  26. ^ Fahey, Rob (9 December 2016), "Final Fantasy XV and The Last Guardian: The Last of their Kind", GamesIndustry.biz
  27. ^ Styhre, Alexander; Remneland-Wikhamn, Björn (2021). "The video game as agencement and the image of new gaming experiences: the work of indie video game developers". Culture and Organization. 27 (6): 476–489. doi:10.1080/14759551.2021.1919893. S2CID 236633168.
  28. ^ Hawley, Jake (June 24, 2021). "Crossplay will be the key to the $42B double-A market". VentureBeat. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
  29. ^ "The Best (mid-tier) AA games you can play in 2022". 2022-02-08. Retrieved 2022-07-19.
  30. ^ Lemme, Bengt (23 January 2016), "The Triple-I Revolution", GameReactor.eu
  31. ^ a b Handrahan, Matthew (May 2, 2018). "An era of "triple-I" development is almost here". GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
  32. ^ Grubb, Jeff (August 26, 2020). "The Initiative's first game — What's the so-called 'AAAA' studio making?". VentureBeat. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
  33. ^ a b Harris, Olivia (September 9, 2020). "Ubisoft Insists On Calling Beyond Good And Evil 2, Skull & Bones 'AAAA' Games". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
  34. ^ Wallace, Chris (5 August 2020). "Why indies are struggling to be seen on the Switch eShop". MCV.
  35. ^ Kohler, Chris (5 March 2008). "Opinion: Why Wii Shovelware Is a Good Thing". Wired. Retrieved 7 July 2014.

video, game, industry, video, game, industry, pronounced, sometimes, written, triple, informal, classification, used, categorise, games, produced, distributed, sized, major, publisher, which, typically, have, higher, development, marketing, budgets, than, othe. In the video game industry AAA pronounced and sometimes written triple A is an informal classification used to categorise games produced and distributed by a mid sized or major publisher which typically have higher development and marketing budgets than other tiers of games 1 Electronic Arts left and Ubisoft Ubisoft Montreal studio shown right are examples of AAA companies in the video game industry In the mid 2010s the term AAA was used to describe AAA type games that generated additional revenue over time in a similar fashion to massively multiplayer online games by using games as a service methods such as season passes and expansion packs The similar construction III Triple I has also been used to describe high production value games in the indie game industry Contents 1 History 2 Related terms 2 1 AAA 2 2 AA Double A 2 3 III 2 4 AAAA 2 5 Other terms 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory EditThe term AAA began to be used in the late 1990s when a few development companies started using the expression at gaming conventions in the US 2 The term was borrowed from the credit industry s bond ratings where AAA bonds represented the safest opportunity most likely to meet their financial goals 3 One of the first video games to be produced at a blockbuster or AAA scale was Squaresoft s Final Fantasy VII 1997 4 which cost an estimated 40 45 million inflation adjusted 68 76 million to develop 5 6 making it the most expensive video game ever produced up until then with its unprecedented cinematic CGI production values movie like presentation orchestral music and innovative blend of gameplay with dynamic cinematic camerawork 7 Its expensive advertisement campaign was also unprecedented for a video game 8 with a combined production and marketing budget estimated to be 80 145 million inflation adjusted 129 234 million as of 2020 update 9 6 Its production budget record was later surpassed by Sega AM2 s Shenmue 1999 estimated to have cost 47 70 million inflation adjusted 73 109 million as of 2020 update 10 By the seventh generation of video game consoles late 2000s AAA game development on the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3 game consoles typically cost in the low tens of millions of dollars 15m to 20m for a new game with some sequels having even higher total budgets for example Halo 3 is estimated to have had a development cost of 30m and a marketing budget of 40m 11 According to a whitepaper published for EA games Dice Europe the seventh generation saw a contraction in the number of video game developing houses creating AAA level titles reducing from an estimated 125 to around 25 but with a roughly corresponding fourfold increase in staffing required for game development 12 Triple A titles produced during the late 1990s and early 2000s brought a shift towards more narrative driven games that mixed storytelling elements with gameplay The earlier widespread adoption of optical media from earlier in the 1990s had brought elements like cutscenes and the advances in real time 3D graphics in the mid 1990s further drove new ways to present stories both elements were incorporated into Final Fantasy VII With larger budgets developers were able to find new innovative ways to present narrative as a direct part of gameplay rather than interspersed into pre rendered cutscenes with Half Life one of the first of these new narrative games to nearly eliminate cutscenes in favor of interactive storytelling mechanisms 13 14 During the seventh generation AAA or blockbuster games had marketing at a similar level to high profile films with television billboard and newspaper advertising a corresponding increasing reliance on sequels reboots and similarly franchised IP was also seen in order to minimize risk Costs at the end of the generation had risen as high as the hundreds of millions of dollars the estimated cost of Grand Theft Auto V was approximately 265m The same conditions also drove the growth of the indie game scene at the other end of the development spectrum where lower costs enabled innovation and risk taking 15 At around the period of transition from seventh to eighth generation of consoles the cost of AAA development was considered by some to be a threat to the stability of the industry 16 17 Staffing and costs for eighth generation games increased at Ubisoft AAA game development involved 400 to 600 persons for open world games split across multiple locations and countries 18 The failure of a single game to meet production costs could lead to the failure of a studio Radical Entertainment was closed by parent Activision despite selling an estimated one million units on console in a short period after release 16 19 Triple A games also began to lose uniqueness and novelty a common trend were a range of grey brown first person shooters that drew on the popularity of the Medal of Honor and Call of Duty series but did little to advance gameplay improvements 20 21 Ubisoft game director Alex Hutchinson described the AAA franchise model as potentially harmful stating he thought it led to either focus group tested products aimed at maximizing profit and or a push towards ever higher graphics fidelity and impact at a cost of depth or gameplay 22 The limited risk taking in the AAA arena and stagnation of new gameplay concepts led to the rise of indie games in the early 2010s which were seen as more experimental This also led to the creation of the AA market in the industry larger studios that were not at the scale of AAA developers but had more experience funding and other factors to make them distinct from the smaller teams usually associated with indie studios 21 AAA game development has been identified as one environment where crunch time and other working pressures that negatively affect employees are particularly evident 23 24 Related terms EditAAA Edit In general use the term AAA Triple A Plus may refer to a subset of AAA games that are the highest selling or have the highest production values However there are at least two more specific meanings The first describes AAA games with additional methods of revenue generation generally through purchases in addition to the cost of the base game 25 The desire for profitability has caused publishers to look at alternative revenue models where players continued to contribute revenue after the initial purchase either by premium models DLC online passes and other forms of subscription 17 In the mid 2010s large publishers began a focus on games engineered to have a long tail in terms of revenue from individual consumers similar to the way MMO games generate income these included those with expansion or season pass content such as with Destiny Battlefield and the Call of Duty series and those which generated revenue from selling in game items sometimes purely cosmetic such as Overwatch or League of Legends 25 Titles of this type are sometimes referred to as AAA In 2016 Gameindustry biz described AAA games as products that combine AAA production values and aesthetics with Software as a Service SaaS principles to keep players engaged for months or even years 26 AA Double A Edit AA or Double A games are mid market video games that typically have some type of professional development though typically outside of the large first party studios of the major developers these may be from larger teams of indie developers in addition to larger non indie studios Double A studios tend to range from 50 to 100 people in size 27 A double A development studio will typically be backed by a publisher but not fundamentally part of that publisher and thus have somewhat more freedom to innovate and experiment compared to triple A studios though will still be constrained by specific risk limiting targets and goals from their funding source Double A games tend to be priced 10 40 compared to 60 70 as of 2021 that triple A games are priced at Examples of games considered to be double A titles include PlayerUnknown s Battlegrounds DayZ a key game in the survival game genre and Among Us 28 As of 2022 game publishers and studios that are currently considered to be AA include Devolver Digital Warhorse Studios Obsidian Entertainment Hazelight Studios and PlatinumGames 29 III Edit III Triple I has been used to refer to independently funded indie games that meet an analogous quality level in their field i e indie games that have relatively high budget scope and ambition 30 often the development team includes staff who have experience working on full AAA titles 31 Examples of III games include Ancestors The Humankind Odyssey Hellblade Senua s Sacrifice and The Witness 31 AAAA Edit Starting in 2020 leading up to the launch of the PS5 and the Xbox Series X two studios started using the term AAAA Quadruple A to describe upcoming games in development Microsoft s studio The Initiative is working on its debut title Perfect Dark for Xbox that s self described as being a AAAA game 32 while Ubisoft announced Beyond Good and Evil 2 and Skull amp Bones would both be AAAA games 33 Despite the announcements there is no agreed upon definition for the term AAAA or what it entails Olivia Harris of ScreenRant noted in September 2020 that t he term AAAA has been floating around in recent months online but it hasn t been adopted by the game industry at large adding that what a AAAA designation even means is still unclear as nothing has yet to ascend beyond the scope of a AAA title With the next generation of consoles releasing later this year perhaps this new level of technology will usher in a new wave of games beyond the current standard of the industry as it currently stands or perhaps it s just the latest self aggrandizing buzzword conjured up to help games stand out in their incredibly competitive field 33 Other terms Edit The console video game industry lacks the equivalent of a B movie made for TV or direct to video scene However titles such as Deadly Premonition and Binary Domain have been dubbed B games due to developing cult followings or accruing significant amounts of critical praise despite widely acknowledged flaws with critics often noting that such a game s ambitions in the face of budget limitations add to the game s charm a trait common among B movies Games like this are the exception and when they are not critically well received are often referred to as bargain bin titles 17 The term shovelware has also been used to describe games that are quickly made without great care for the quality of the product as to make easy sales to consumers as a metaphor for shoveling material onto a pile Licensed video game tie ins for films often tend to be considered shovelware for example 34 35 See also EditNintendo Seal of Quality Indie gameReferences Edit Steinberg Scott 2007 The definitive Guide Videogame Marketing and PR 1st ed iUniverse ISBN 978 0 59543 371 1 Demaria Rusel Wilson John 2002 High Score The Illustrated History of Electronic Games 1st ed McGraw Hill Osborne Media ISBN 0 07 222428 2 Bernevega A Gekker A April 2021 The Industry of Landlords Exploring the Assetization of the Triple A Game Games and Culture 17 47 69 doi 10 1177 15554120211014151 Parkin Simon 11 April 2020 Final Fantasy VII Remake a triumphant return for Cloud Strife The Guardian Retrieved 11 April 2020 Essential 50 Final Fantasy VII 1UP com Archived from the original on July 21 2012 Retrieved April 22 2013 a b Final Fantasy 7 An oral history Polygon Jan 9 2017 Retrieved Feb 2 2018 Park Gene 4 April 2020 Perfecting Final Fantasy 7 s legacy as told by its creators The Washington Post Archived from the original on 8 April 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Packer Joseph Stoneman Ethan 2018 Video Games and the Death Denying Illusion of Agency A Feeling of Wrongness Pessimistic Rhetoric on the Fringes of Popular Culture Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 08315 5 Stanton Rich June 2 2013 Final Fantasy 7 retrospective Eurogamer Retrieved March 20 2014 Diver Mike 2 May 2015 Shenmue discovering the Sega classic 14 years too late The Guardian Archived from the original on June 26 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2015 Zackariasson Peter Wilson Timothy L eds 2012 The Video Game Industry Formation Present State and Future Routledge p 4 Robinson Andy 4 July 2013 Triple A console studios declined by 80 this gen says EA exec ComputerAndVideoGames com archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Shirinian Ara January 26 2010 The Uneasy Merging of Narrative and Gameplay Gamasutra Retrieved March 20 2021 MacGregor Jody September 20 2020 22 years later Half Life s influence is still being felt PC Gamer Retrieved March 23 2021 Why video games are so expensive to develop The Economist 24 September 2014 a b Usher William 2012 AAA Games Could Lead to Mainstream Crash CinemaBlend com a b c The State of Games State of AAA Polygon com 2 July 2012 Weber Rachel 28 February 2013 On Reflections First interview with the Ubisoft studio s new MD GamesIndustry biz Usher William 2012 Radical Entertainment Goes Bust Prototype Franchise Is No More CinemaBlend com Rath Robert November 8 2012 The Medal of Honor Curse Escapist Magazine Retrieved July 3 2021 a b Pearce Dan July 2 2021 Opinion Indie Has Lost Its Meaning IGN Retrieved July 3 2021 Makuch Eddie 8 March 2012 Pursuit of AAA is a cancerous growth AC3 Dev GameSpot archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Kerr Chris 7 October 2016 AAA game dev lifestyle is unwinnable says veteran game designer Amy Hennig Gamasutra Strickland Derek 22 January 2016 Ex Ubisoft dev reveals the grim reality of AAA games development TweakTown com a b Fahey Rob 25 November 2016 Weak AAA launches are a precursor to industry transition GamesIndustry biz Fahey Rob 9 December 2016 Final Fantasy XV and The Last Guardian The Last of their Kind GamesIndustry biz Styhre Alexander Remneland Wikhamn Bjorn 2021 The video game as agencement and the image of new gaming experiences the work of indie video game developers Culture and Organization 27 6 476 489 doi 10 1080 14759551 2021 1919893 S2CID 236633168 Hawley Jake June 24 2021 Crossplay will be the key to the 42B double A market VentureBeat Retrieved June 26 2021 The Best mid tier AA games you can play in 2022 2022 02 08 Retrieved 2022 07 19 Lemme Bengt 23 January 2016 The Triple I Revolution GameReactor eu a b Handrahan Matthew May 2 2018 An era of triple I development is almost here GamesIndustry biz Retrieved November 15 2019 Grubb Jeff August 26 2020 The Initiative s first game What s the so called AAAA studio making VentureBeat Retrieved October 8 2020 a b Harris Olivia September 9 2020 Ubisoft Insists On Calling Beyond Good And Evil 2 Skull amp Bones AAAA Games ScreenRant Retrieved October 8 2020 Wallace Chris 5 August 2020 Why indies are struggling to be seen on the Switch eShop MCV Kohler Chris 5 March 2008 Opinion Why Wii Shovelware Is a Good Thing Wired Retrieved 7 July 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AAA video game industry amp oldid 1138182179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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