gaming developer

Gaming Developers have in Africa showcased their creations at the annual Africa Games Week that took place in Cape Town.

The event was held in an effort by the organizers of the continent’s largest gathering of game developers to help the gaming industry meet the demand for African-made content and boost the potential of local talent.

“Most of the games on the market are from America, Europe, and Japan, but African content is negligible. There’s “a lot of content that is new and not been fully explored yet,” said Poone, founder of Dream Shards.

The hybrid event attracted some 2,500 developers, coders, designers, investors, and publishers, with 600 of them attending in person.

Event co-founder Nick Hall said a lot of publishers say they want African-made content.

“There’s a huge opportunity. Now is …the best time really to be making games or trying to get into the games industry because we’re hoping in the next few years we’re going to see a massive spike in growth,” he said.

Burdened with poverty and infrastructure problems such as reliable telecoms and electricity supply, Africa traditionally lagged far behind other continents in gaming.

But recent years have seen an extraordinary boom — gamers in sub-Saharan Africa increased to 186 million in 2021 from 77 million in 2015, according to a study by game analytics company Newzoo.

Of those 186 million, 63 million pay for games as the continent embraces digital currencies.

Nine-five percent of the market is on mobiles, reflecting the continent’s improved Internet access and affordable smartphones.

Previously, many Africans got their virtual fix on computers in internet cafés.

Africa, along with China and India, is expected to surpass a billion gamers, and the continent is home to industry’s “last untapped consumer audience”, Hall said.

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He predicts that Africa could reach one billion users in the next five years.

To cash in on Africa’s gaming boom, large developers need to work with local content creators, such as streamers or You Tubers, Hall said.

South Africa is by far the continent’s largest gaming market with 40 percent of its population playing, followed by Ghana and Nigeria. And a lot more are upcoming.

Others developers are making games not just for fun, but for social causes.

Jay Shapiro of Usiku Games, a Kenya-based social impact gaming company, created Seedballs, which helps replenish Kenya’s lost forests in the semi-arid north of the country.

Kenya this year hopes by end of this year to have increased its forest cover from seven percent to 10 percent.

Shapiro says the game is helping achieve that goal.

“We created a mobile game for them when you fly a plane, and instead of the usual dropping bombs and trying to destroy things, you’re dropping seeds and trying to plant trees,” he said.

At the end of the game, players are congratulated on the number of virtual trees they have planted, and are asked if they would like to turn those into real trees.

They have urged a donation of one Kenyan shilling (just 0.008 of a dollar) per virtually planted tree.

“It’s the only example we’ve seen of actually using gaming to plant real trees,” Shapiro said.

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Nigel Jr.
As a tech enthusiast and expert, Nigel Jr. is dedicated to providing in-depth and insightful content on all things technology. With a background in online journalism, product reviewing, and tech creation, Nigel has become a trusted source for all things tech.

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