Entertainment

Netflix confirms move into video games as growth slows

The 5.5 million subscribers that Netflix gained through the first six months of this year marks its weakest first-half performance since 2013.
The 5.5 million subscribers that Netflix gained through the first six months of this year marks its weakest first-half performance since 2013. The 5.5 million subscribers that Netflix gained through the first six months of this year marks its weakest first-half performance since 2013.

Netflix has reported its worst slowdown in subscriber growth in eight years as people emerge from their pandemic cocoons.

But it has an answer to that – video games.

On Tuesday, the streaming giant announced plans to begin adding video games to its existing subscription packages at no extra cost. The confirmation of the long-anticipated expansion came in conjunction with the release of its latest earnings report.

Fellowship for screenwriters
Fellowship for screenwriters (PA)

That financial breakdown showed the video service added 1.5 million subscribers during the April-June period.

That is slightly better than the modest increase that management forecast after the service stumbled to a sluggish start during the winter months, but still far below its growth rate in recent years.

The 5.5 million subscribers that Netflix gained through the first six months of this year marks its weakest first-half performance since 2013 – a period when the company was still rolling out more original programming instead of licensing old TV series and movies.

Now Netflix is taking another leap by offering video games. The company telegraphed the move last week when it disclosed the hiring of a veteran video game executive, Mike Verdu, to explore potential opportunities in another field of entertainment.

“We view gaming as another new content category for us, similar to our expansion into original films, animation and unscripted TV,” Netflix wrote in a Tuesday letter to shareholders.

Despite this year’s growth slowdown, Netflix remains by far the world’s biggest streaming service in an increasingly competitive field that includes Walt Disney, HBO, Amazon and Apple.

Netflix finished June with 209 million worldwide subscribers.