Skip to main content

Electronic Arts battens down the hatches with Origin Free To Play

origin free to play
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The next phase of Electronic Arts’s push into free-to-play gaming began this week as the company consolidated its digital businesses. Play4Free.com, EA’s web portal directing to early free-to-play games like Battlefield Heroes, is no longer an independent entity. Now it’s a part of EA’s digital game platform and network Origin, renamed appropriately as Origin Free To Play.

“Why change to Origin Free to Play?” reads EA’s press release, “The main reason is convenience for players—Origin now becomes your single destination for paid download PC games and free-to-play games alike.”

Of course, that’s not the main reason at all. The main reason is branding. Electronic Arts wants all of its toys in the same cabinet, so that it can entice the diehard Battlefield 3 PC player to potentially try out a free game like Battlefield Heroes if they’re looking at both games through the Origin user interface. Tightening its efforts is essential for a sprawling business like EA, and the switch jives well with EA’s goal of pushing its products across multiple platforms.

Electronic Arts has spent much of 2012 aggressively fortifying itself for a world where video games are not single $60 purchases but games downloaded for free and paid for piecemeal by players that want new content. It’s done this with varying degrees of success. Just take the company’s studio brand BioWare. Word that BioWare’s PC strategy game Command & Conquer: Generals 2 would be free-to-play but would lack a single player campaign, fans revolted and EA decided it would, after all, build single play content.

The company also recently recast BioWare’s MMO Star Wars: The Old Republic as a free-to-play game. The initial changes proved so disastrous that EA had to scramble to change the game yet again within days of the relaunch.

Electronic Arts has left no stone unturned over the past few years, investing heavily in social, mobile, and casual games. The company spent an alleged $1.3 billion on Plants vs. Zombies studio PopCap Games in 2011. Even as its digital business has grown thanks to free-to-play games and casual titles, real financial growth has eluded EA.

Origin Free To Play may be a crucial part of EA’s business at some point, but for the time being packaged products like Madden NFL and FIFA will remain its bread and butter. After all, only 10 percent of the $50 billion in revenue generated by the games industry each year comes from casual players. EA is tilling the soil but there’s no guarantee it will bear fruit.

Anthony John Agnello
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anthony John Agnello is a writer living in New York. He works as the Community Manager of Joystiq.com and his writing has…
Volgarr the Viking 2 will take you back to your Ghosts ‘n Goblins days
A viking slashes a tree in Volgarr the Viking 2.

Developer Digital Eclipse is working on a surprising project: Volgarr the Viking 2. The 2D retro sequel will launch on August 6 for PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch, and PC.

The news is an out of left field reveal. The first Volgarr the Viking game released in 2013 and was made as an ode to 1080s classics like Ghosts 'n Goblins. Despite being a small release, it sold over 1 million copies over the past decade. As revealed during today's Guerrilla Collective stream, the series is coming back with a new sequel by Digital Eclipse, the team behind this year's Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story.

Read more
3 Days of Play PS Plus games to try this weekend (June 7-9)
Key art for Streets of Rage 4.

June 2024 is shaping up to be a pretty great month for PlayStation players. Not only are we coming off an entertaining State of Play showcase, but a new Days of Play initiative surrounding all the video game showcases this month is bringing a lot of new PS Plus additions with it. Many of those games hit PS Plus this week, and three in particular stand out to us.

For owners of Sony's oft-neglected PlayStation VR2, the first game is one of its rare exclusives that take full advantage of the headset's eye-tracking by seeing how often players blink. The next is a new PS Plus Essential game that's a revival of Sega's classic beat-'em-up series for the modern gaming era. Finally, the last title is an atmospheric and eerie fishing game that should entice fans of Lovecraftian horror.
Before Your Eyes

Read more
3 first-party Xbox Game Pass games to try this weekend (June 7-9)
Gears 5 Kait Hero Close Up

Microsoft will hold an Xbox Games Showcase and Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Direct. this Sunday. These shows will provide a much better idea of what to expect from Xbox over the course of the next year or two. That's really needed right now, as Microsoft has struggled to keep online discussions around Xbox positive as it went multiplatform with some games, laid off thousands of developers, and outright shut down the developers of Hi-Fi Rush and Redfall. Based on leaks and my personal expectations for the showcase, there are three games you can play on Xbox Game Pass this weekend to prepare for the event.

The first is the latest first-person shooter in a long-running series by id Software that might be getting a medieval-set spinoff. After that, we have the fifth entry in a sci-fi Xbox series that still looks fantastic on Xbox Series X/S even though it came out in 2019. Finally, you can prepare for Avowed with the latest RPG from Obsidian Entertainment, a satirical sci-fi game where player choice is critical.
Doom Eternal

Read more