Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Apple could make up to $3 billion from 'Pokémon Go' over the next two years

Add as a preferred source on Google

Everyone’s crazy about Pokémon Go, which has turned into a virtual gold mine for Nintendo. But the company isn’t catching them all when it comes to revenue, as estimates now place Apple’s cut at a staggering $3 billion over the next two years.

The somewhat unexpected windfall for Apple comes due to its App Store policies. Apple gets a 30 percent cut of all sales, regardless of whether you’re a small-time developer or a multibillion-dollar corporation like Nintendo. Needham & Company analyst Laura Martin says her research indicates that Pokémon is doing better than other previous iOS gaming hits, leading her to forecast big-time revenue.

Recommended Videos

“As background, Candy Crush generated more than $1B of revenue in each of 2013 and 2014, and Pokémon Go’s ratio of paid users to total users is 10 [times] higher,” Martin is quoted as saying in a research note by 9to5Mac. If she’s right, the popular game might account for a significant portion of App Store revenue in 2016.

App Store revenues were about $20 billion for all of 2015. While it seems a bit insane to think a single game could account for 15 percent of App Store revenue, just take a look at how addictive the game has become for many. Add in options like buying $150 worth of PokéCoins, and it just might be possible.

Besides the windfall for Apple, Pokémon Go is also changing the fortunes for its parent company. Nintendo is now worth $42.5 billion, double what it was before the game’s release. The company set a record on the Tokyo stock exchange Friday for the most stock trading in a single company in one day this century, The Verge reports.

Of course, investors could also be responding to Nintendo’s announcement of a special edition of the original NES coming this holiday. From the public response, that looks to be a surefire hit — so the best days for Nintendo might yet be to come.

Ed Oswald
For fifteen years, Ed has written about the latest and greatest in gadgets and technology trends. At Digital Trends, he's…
GTA 6 may not get the real physical release fans were hoping for
The game may come in a case, but not on a disc
GTA 6 cover art

Grand Theft Auto 6 pre-orders recently went live, but the excitement came with one frustrating catch. The so-called physical edition of the game will not include a disc. Instead, buyers will get a box with cover art and a download code inside.

That decision immediately caused backlash online, especially among collectors who still care about owning games on disc. For a while, there was some hope that this would only be temporary. Reports suggested that Rockstar could release a proper disc version of GTA 6 in December 2026, giving physical media fans something to wait for.

Read more
The Steam Machine launch hasn’t even happened, but the resale circus has begun
Scalpers are already trying to cash in on Valve’s Steam Machine
Valve Steam Machine Featured Design Coverplate

Valve has started sending out reservation emails for the Steam Machine ahead of its June 30 launch, and scalpers have wasted no time turning the whole thing into a comedy act.

The Steam Machine is already an expensive device, as RAM and SSD prices have made hardware pricing miserable across the industry. Valve has previously said it would like to lower the price if component costs improve. That makes the resale listings even harder to take seriously, because the official price was already higher than many people expected before scalpers added their own fantasy tax.

Read more
Valve would love to lower the Steam Machine’s price, but the timing couldn’t be worse
The gaming giant blames the ongoing component crunch for pushing its console-PC hybrid into four-figure territory.
Valve Branding on the Steam Machine

When Valve finally revealed the Steam Machine's $1,049 starting price, the reaction was almost unanimous: the hardware looks fantastic, but the price hurts. Now, the company has confirmed what many gamers suspected all along: it never wanted the Steam Machine to cost this much in the first place.

Valve says the Steam Machine wasn't meant to cost this much

Read more