Capcom and Square Enix Confirm: Digital Dominates Video Game Sales
Sales figures from two Japanese giants reveal an overwhelming preference for digital copies, relegating physical formats to a niche.

Capcom and Square Enix have settled the debate surrounding video game formats, confirming a trend we've been observing: the absolute dominance of the digital format. Both major Japanese publishers have reported that the vast majority of their revenue comes from digital sales, marking a turning point in the industry. This signifies that players overwhelmingly prefer acquiring their favorite titles through downloads rather than physical copies.
Square Enix reported selling 26.68 million games in its latest fiscal year, which concluded in March 2026. Of this figure, an impressive 21.70 million were digital downloads. Physical units, on the other hand, amounted to 4.98 million. This translates to digital format accounting for approximately 81.3% of their total sales, while physical format represented 18.7%. The digital preference was even more pronounced in key markets like North America and Europe, where downloads reached 14.48 million compared to just 2.76 million physical units.
Capcom's figures are even more revealing and point to a further consolidation of the digital format. The company closed its fiscal year with a historic record of 59.07 million games sold. Of this total, 54.93 million were digital units, equating to a commanding 93% of their sales. The projection for the next fiscal year is even more aggressive, anticipating 62 million digital units out of a total of 65 million sales, meaning around 95.4%.
This paradigm shift is explained by multiple factors that benefit digital distribution. Capcom, in particular, has capitalized on the scale offered by the digital catalog, the PC market, constant sales, and distribution without the logistical and stock barriers inherent in physical stores. Their physical sales revenue decreased by 10% year-on-year, while digital sales, including licenses, experienced a notable 21% increase.
Capcom and Square Enix have settled the debate surrounding video game formats, confirming a trend we've been observing: the absolute dominance of the digital format.
The trend observed with Square Enix, while less drastic than Capcom's, also underscores the importance of the digital channel. Although physical units slightly increased from 4.53 to 4.98 million, digital downloads rose from 20.91 to 21.70 million. Even the digital percentage saw a minimal dip from the previous year (from 82.2% to 81.3%). This demonstrates that while physical format persists, digital is already the fundamental structure of the business.
The physical video game format, while not disappearing overnight, faces an increasingly relegated future. Game boxes used to contain complete titles, detailed manuals, and extras. Today, many physical games require additional downloads to be playable, or are even mere download codes, as seen in some Nintendo releases. The wait for a physical game contrasts sharply with the immediacy of digital purchase and download.
Demand for physical games is now primarily concentrated among collectors, special editions, gifts, and users who wish to own a tangible copy. The physical format is transitioning from being the distribution standard to a secondary option, often premium or limited edition in nature. Its survival will depend on these niches, but it no longer represents the main sales driver for major publishers.
The figures presented by Capcom and Square Enix leave no room for doubt about the market's direction. The convenience, immediacy, and pricing strategies of the digital format have won over the majority of players. Publishers, faced with this reality, have increasingly fewer incentives to prioritize the production, logistics, and distribution of discs and cartridges, thus consolidating the reign of digital downloads in the video game industry.
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