About the author
Jukka Hilvonen
Strategic Growth Leader | Mobile Games Marketing | Product Marketing | Game Growth
Journal 6 Jukka Hilvonen April 9
Developing a new mobile game is one of the riskiest and most expensive moves a studio can make.
Especially in the free-to-play (F2P) space, where competition is fierce, user expectations are higher than ever, and marketing is crazy expensive, making a wrong bet can mean burning hundreds of thousands of dollars—or more—with nothing to show for it.
That’s why concept validation isn’t just a smart move. It’s essential.
Let’s talk about numbers:
Let these numbers sink in for a second.
So why do so many games fail? Of course, there are multiple reasons for it. Often, the core concept was never tested before development began, and developers did not realize that there was no demand for the game in the market.
Game concept validation is the process of answering one critical question: Does the market actually want this game?
It involves structured research, creative testing, and early performance analysis that help studios:
In short, it’s a way to de-risk your next big idea.
Many studios skip concept validation for the same reasons:
But here’s the truth: every day spent building a game nobody wants is time and money you’ll never get back. And in most cases, these mistakes aren’t visible until soft launch—by which point you’ve already sunk considerable share of the budget.
In a market where only the top-performing games break through, guesswork just isn’t good enough. Game concept validation isn’t about slowing down—it’s about making sure your time and money are invested in the right idea.
If you’re considering your next game project, ask yourself: Would you rather know it’s a hit before or after you build it?
About the author
Strategic Growth Leader | Mobile Games Marketing | Product Marketing | Game Growth
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