Video games lose attention war to gambling and social media, report says

A new industry report by analyst Matthew Ball highlights how video games are struggling to compete for users' time against gambling, pornography, and social media platforms. Spending on gaming has grown modestly in recent years, but alternatives like OnlyFans and online betting have seen explosive increases. The analysis points to shifts in the 'Major Market 8' countries, where participation in gaming has declined post-pandemic.

Matthew Ball, a venture capitalist and gaming industry analyst, released his 2026 report on the state of video games, a 164-page presentation examining trends in the sector. Titled in parts as addressing how "video games are losing the attention war in the 'Major Market 8,'" it covers eight key markets: the USA, Japan, South Korea, UK, Germany, France, Canada, and Italy, which accounted for over 60 percent of global gaming spending before the pandemic.

Post-pandemic, gaming participation has dropped in these regions. In the US, 2.5 to 4 percentage points of players have stopped, according to the Canadian Trade Association's findings of roughly one-in-six players quitting in Canada. This has led to reduced spending: US PC and console expenditures fell 8 percent since 2020-2021, totaling a $2.3 billion decline. Across the Major Market 8, console and PC spending shrank by $4.8 billion, and mobile by $2.3 billion, despite five markets reaching all-time highs in overall consumer spending.

The report attributes this to competition from other interactive entertainments, including social video, creator pornography, AI assistants, crypto and memecoins, prediction markets, online sports betting, and iGaming. US TikTok consumption rose by 39 million hours daily compared to pre-COVID levels. Annual US spending on OnlyFans reached nearly $5 billion in 2025. Online sports betting saw US net losses exceed $17 billion in 2025, a 35-fold increase from 2019, with global figures at $53 billion. iGaming losses worldwide totaled $54 billion annually, representing 45 percent of global gaming spending and twice the growth of mobile casino games.

Ball writes, "Video games not only compete with many new interactive substitutes, but video gamers face a barrage of new, interruptive, and irresistible notifications for these substitutes." He adds, "Video gaming’s post-pandemic problem isn’t that players choose to watch TikTok instead of buy a AAA game, or subscribe to OnlyFans instead of buying a PlayStation; it’s that on a Friday evening, players are placing a growing share of their time and spend elsewhere."

US gaming spending rose from $38.8 billion in 2019 to $51.8 billion in 2025, a $12.9 billion increase. In contrast, spending on OnlyFans, sports betting, and internet casinos jumped from $1.2 billion to $32.8 billion over the same period. Growth in China and Roblox—accounting for 67 percent of net growth—offers some positive signs, though the report notes a shift toward free-to-play models and away from AAA titles. Investment in the industry is declining as companies like Sony and Epic Games (Fortnite) rely on price increases for loyal users.

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The video game industry is grappling with a widening generational gap in player preferences amid rising AI integration costs. More players are engaging with fewer, often older games, while hardware expenses threaten affordability. Publishers must adapt to diverse demographics to sustain growth.

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Following the November 2025 Circana report revealing record-low US console unit sales of 1.6 million since 1995, hardware spending hit $695 million—the weakest dollar figure since 2005—amid prices doubling to $439 since 2019. Total spending fell 4% to $5.9 billion despite Black Friday deals.

In 2026, clips from live gaming streams are reshaping content consumption on YouTube Shorts and TikTok, offering authentic and immediate experiences that captivate audiences. This trend, driven by evolving digital habits, prioritizes unscripted moments over polished videos, boosting engagement among younger viewers. Data from late 2025 highlights the format's role in driving significant growth in gaming community interactions.

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In 2025, a tech writer attempted to re-engage with major social media platforms after years of avoidance, only to find them dominated by sponsored content and AI-generated material that eroded genuine human connections. This personal experience reflected a broader disillusionment, making it simpler to step away despite record user numbers on platforms like Instagram and TikTok. Alternatives like Reddit and Bluesky offered some respite amid the commercial overload.

 

 

 

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