Angry gamers are winning the war against Electronic Arts’ controversial money-making strategy in its new “Star Wars Battlefront II” game. Wall Street is taking notice and lowering its expectations for the title’s financial prospects.
The company announced Thursday it is temporarily turning off all in-game purchases in “Star Wars Battlefront II” in response to the negative sentiment from the gaming community.
“It’s clear that many of you feel there are still challenges in the design. We’ve heard the concerns about potentially giving players unfair advantages … Sorry we didn’t get this right,” EA wrote in the post. “We hear you loud and clear, so we’re turning off all in-game purchases … The ability to purchase crystals in-game will become available at a later date, only after we’ve made changes to the game.”
EA’s “Star Wars Battlefront II” officially launches on Friday, but portions of the game went live on Nov. 9 for the company’s EA Access and Origin Access subscribers.
The company’s shares opened down 2.3 percent Friday.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch now predicts the “Star Wars” title sales are likely to disappoint investors and come under the company’s target due to the gamer outrage.
“The escalation of EA concessions over the past month are a potential negative indicator of pre-order sales trends and overall unit confidence,” analyst Justin Post wrote in a note to clients Friday entitled “In-game purchases benched the night before launch.”
The “Star Wars Battlefront II” “bumpy launch week creates incremental risk to early unit sales (initial reviews also underwhelming) … We think unit sales could come in below EA’s earlier FY18 outlook for around 14mn units.”
Post maintained his buy rating and $137 price target for Electronic Arts shares, representing 23 percent upside to Thursday’s close.
The analyst is hopeful upside from the publisher’s sports titles will make up for “Star Wars Battlefront II”‘s faltering sales results.
“We think the strength of Ultimate Team could offset a 2-3 million unit shortfall for Battlefront, and remain comfortable with our FY18 estimates,” he wrote.
The initial uproar centered on in-game purchases in “Star Wars Battlefront II.” They allowed players to save time by paying extra money to accelerate the “unlock” of major characters like Darth Vader.
The gaming community flooded social media and Reddit with thousands of negative posts, saying the company is unfairly compelling consumers to spend more money for content that should be part of the initial $60 game price.
The company has already partly backtracked as it announced Monday it reduced the credits cost to unlock key characters by 75 percent.
Even before the recent social media controversy, other analysts were concerned over “Star Wars Battlefront II” prospects.
Jefferies’ analyst Timothy O’Shea questioned whether “Star Wars” game buyers will pay more like consumers of EA’s popular sports titles.
“If Star Wars can encourage users to spend real money on virtual goods (like FIFA) the game could drive meaningful upside to F’18 and ’19 EPS, but this is not a certainty,” O’Shea wrote in a note to clients Nov. 1 entitled “Star Wars Battlefront 2: A Trick Or a Treat?”
The gaming community is still not satisfied even with EA’s latest move to pause in-game purchases, calling out the temporary nature of the action.
The battle between gamers and Electronic Arts over micro-transactions is far from over.
EA’s stock is down 7 percent month to date through Thursday compared with the S&P 500’s 0.4 percent gain. The game maker’s shares are still up 42 percent so far this year.
The company declined to comment for this story.
Wall Street is freaking out as EA caves again to social media outrage over its ‘Star Wars’ game