Square Enix rakes in record profit
Dragon Quest VIII, Final Fantasy XI, and Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories boost the RPG publisher's bottom line for fiscal year 2005.
TOKYO--Square Enix reported today that it set new records in sales, operation profits, and net earnings for the business year ended March 31, 2005. The company's sales were up 16.9 percent to 73.8 billion yen ($686 million), operation profits were up 36.3 percent to 26.4 billion yen ($245 million), and net profit was up 35.8 percent to 14.9 billion yen ($139 million).
Square Enix comments that the sales in its core consumer game software segment, particularly those of Dragon Quest VIII (PlayStation 2) and Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories (Game Boy Advance), made significant contributions to the company's bottom line. In Japan, Dragon Quest VIII--the predecessors of which have been something of a national obsession in Japan--sold a total of 3.61 million units since its release in late November. Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories sold 360,000 units in Japan and 640,000 units in America, totaling 1 million units worldwide. Final Fantasy I & II (GBA) almost reached a million copies sold as well: it shipped 290,000 units in Japan, 500,000 units in America, and 150,000 units in Europe.
In FY 2005, Square Enix released 11 titles in Japan, seven titles in America, four titles in Europe, and one title in Asia. When including older titles, the company shipped 6.3 million game units in Japan, 3.76 million units in America, 920,000 units in PAL regions (including Europe), and 70,000 units in Asia. While sales were actually down by 2.57 million units from FY 2004, sales in Square Enix's consumer game segment were up 10.4 percent to 41.9 billion yen ($400 million), and the segment's operation profits were up 19.8 percent to 19.6 billion yen ($182 million).
Another major contributor to Square Enix's earnings for the year was its online segment. Revenue from Square Enix's online fees rose 55 percent to 13.8 billion yen ($128 million), and its operation profit more than doubled to 5 billion yen ($47 million). The company explains that PlayOnline and Final Fantasy XI users continued to grow during the year, and there are currently over 500,000 subscribers to FFXI. Square Enix also says that its massively multiplayer online role-playing game, Cross Gate, is still popular in China.
Revenue from Square Enix's mobile content segment was up 63 percent to 4.5 billion yen ($42 million), and operation profits rose 50 percent to 1.7 billion yen (16 million). During the past year, the company began launching online mobile games based on popular franchises, such as Before Crisis: Final Fantasy VII and Front Mission 2089.
Looking ahead, Square Enix forecasts sales of 90 billion yen (837 million), operation profit of 27 billion yen (251 million), and a net profit of 15.5 billion yen (144 million) for the current business year starting April 1. One of the major games that Square Enix is expected to release during the business year is Final Fantasy XII for the PS2. The title was not shown at E3, but the company will show a playable version of the game at the end of July.
For more information on Square Enix's plans for the future, check out GameSpot's coverage of the company's E3 announcements.
Hot Stories
Newsmakers
-
Dragon Age: Origins Interview with Ray Muzyka
We chat with Ray Muzyka about some of the features in Dragon Age: Origins. Full Story
- Posted Jul 8, 2009 4:06 pm PT
-
Left 4 Dead 2 Doug Lombardi Interview
We talk to Doug Lombardi about Left 4 Dead 2 at a recent preview event in London. Full Story
- Posted Jul 3, 2009 4:42 pm PT
Featured Stories
-
Sony dismisses Activision threats, PS3 price cut rumors
Sony Corp. CEO Sir Howard Stringer brands third-party publisher's comments as "noise," SCEA CEO Jack Tretton says other consoles don't deliver the same value. Full Story
- Posted Jul 8, 2009 1:15 pm PT
- 1060 Comments
-
PS3 MGS4/Killzone 2 bundle now available
Best Buy begins offering rumored $400 retail configuration, which packs in 80GB console with nearly $90 of top-rated games. Full Story
- Posted Jul 7, 2009 11:19 am PT
- 501 Comments
-
Battlefield 1943 suffers server snafu
EA Dice's multiplayer-only downloadable shooter experiencing matchmaking technical difficulties after Xbox 360 launch this morning. Full Story
- Posted Jul 8, 2009 12:48 pm PT
- 166 Comments
-
Blizzard: Free-to-play WOW 'possible'
Lead designer Tom Chilton says the multiplatinum MMORPG champion could abolish monthly subscription plan by adopting microtransaction system. Full Story
- Posted Jul 7, 2009 12:43 pm PT
- 362 Comments
-
Square Enix retires Eidos publishing label
Japanese pub consolidates operations in Europe and NA, confirming some headcount reduction; British company's name will live on through dev studios. Full Story
- Posted Jul 7, 2009 11:15 am PT
- 150 Comments
Related Game
Related Games
Recent News
Site Blogs
-
Battlefield 1943 Review Coming Monday
Battlefield 1943, the latest entry in the venerable Battlefield series, arrived on the Xbox Live Marketplace and PlayStation Network this...




1 Comments