The success of “Angry Birds” is helping Finland’s other mobile game fledglings take wing.
Enticed by the title’s rapid rise to fame, venture-capital investors are flocking to the Nordic country in search of the next hit. The game developers attracting attention include the makers of “Clash of Clans,” “Hay Day” and “Hill Climb Racing.” Each of those has had millions of downloads, joining “Angry Birds” in Apple Inc’s application store’s top lists.
Expanding at an annual pace of 57 per cent, gaming has emerged as a niche growth industry for the country of five million seeking to diversify its economy as once-dominant mobile phone maker Nokia Oyj shrinks and cuts thousands of jobs. “Angry Birds” maker Rovio Entertainment Oy attracting $42 million in venture money in 2011 has helped local rivals including Supercell Oy and Grey Area Oy also lure international backers.
“There’s an amazing critical mass here,” said Sean Seton- Rogers, general partner at London-based Profounders Capital, who joined thousands of investors and entrepreneurs in the Nordic region’s biggest start-up event, Slush, in Helsinki this week. “Once you start having a viable ecosystem, it feeds off itself.”
Helsinki-based Supercell’s “Clash of Clans” was the top-grossing iPhone app in the US as of November 21, meaning its players spent the most money, including in-game purchases, according to appannie.com. Oulu, Finland-based Fingersoft Oy’s “Hill Climb Racing” was the most downloaded free game.
“Angry Birds” was named the most downloaded paid app ever this year by Apple, and its “Angry Birds Star Wars” edition is the most popular paid app now, according to appannie.com. While Finnish start-ups are benefiting from the extra engineering talent available as Nokia cuts jobs, the country’s gaming industry is decades-old and began developing in the era of personal-computer titles. A shift in player preferences towards mobile phones and tablets, resulting in Rovio’s success, gave the industry a shot in the arm, Seton-Rogers said.
“The market has really grown with the growth in mobile gaming,” said Seton-Rogers, who helps manage 30 million euros ($39 million) of venture funds and first invested in a Finnish startup, mobile gaming cross-promotion network Applifier, last year. “As that’s taken off, people pay more attention now.”
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Supercell got a $12 million investment last year from Accel Partners, which also has a stake in Rovio and was an early backer of Facebook Inc. Grey Area, maker of the location-based multiplayer game “Shadow Cities,” has raised money from investors including Index Ventures and London Venture Partners.
‘Insanely Powerful’
While Finnish game makers compete in some areas, they cooperate in others, sharing experiences as they seek global growth. Helping with that goal is Startup Sauna, a non-profit organization focused on polishing small businesses into world- beaters, based on pro bono input from coaches like Rovio Chief Marketing Officer Peter Vesterbacka and Supercell Chief Executive Officer Ilkka Paananen.
“It’s all about the community, which makes it insanely powerful,” said Vesterbacka, a co-founder of Slush, welcoming visitors in his trademark red hooded sweatshirt to the event whose attendance doubled from last year to 3,000. “It’s cold and dark, but once you get inside, there are amazing startups.”
Developers also tend to move around, spreading talent. Supercell CEO Paananen, for instance, has held top positions in companies including Digital Chocolate Inc. and Sumea Oy, which developed games in the early 2000s in cooperation with Nokia.
Gaming Cluster
Finnish game-industry veterans including Matias Myllyrinne are embracing the new competition. Myllyrinne is the CEO of Remedy Entertainment Oy, the developer behind “Max Payne” and “Alan Wake,” which beat “Angry Birds” for Time magazine’s game of the year in 2010.
“It’s absolutely fantastic -- the birth of a gaming cluster is good for everybody in the field,” he said in an interview. “The threshold for me to call up the guys at Supercell or Rovio is not very high, and vice versa.”
In a change of pace from blockbuster titles developed for Microsoft Corp.’s Xbox 360, Remedy has also tried its luck in mobile gaming, selling more than 10 million digital copies of “Death Rally”.
“We’ve started looking at tablets and mobile phones, there are fine opportunities for us to bring our knowhow,” he said. “One can go see ‘Lord of the Rings’ on a big screen or watch YouTube clips, they serve a different function.”
Plush Toys
As mobile games typically cost a maximum of a few dollars, and many are free, the revenue the startups generate from game sales is limited. Many target extra revenue from selling ads and in-game features, as well as merchandise such as the ubiquitous “Angry Birds” T-shirts, plush toys and candy.
The game industry in Finland grew 57 percent in 2011 to 165 million euros, according to the Finnish chapter of the International Game Developers Association. Growth has continued this year, with Supercell alone now grossing “clearly above” $500,000 a day, helped by “Clash of Clans” and “Hay Day,” Paananen said in an interview. Apple takes a 30 percent cut of what a game on its system grosses, with the developer keeping the rest.
To help fuel the growth, Finland’s government is planning tax breaks for minority investments in unlisted growth companies. Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen attended Slush, wearing colorful nail polish as he made his opening remarks, part of a publicity stunt for guitar-learning game “GuitarBots.”
The nascent political support, coupled with the thriving game-industry community and the “Angry Birds” success, make it easier for startups to stay in Finland and less necessary to relocate to Silicon Valley to gain funding.
“Helsinki is the best city in the world to build games at the moment,” Paananen said. “People understand that it’s possible to become global from Finland -- to have an example like Rovio is very inspiring and motivating.”