Hogwarts Legacy closed 2023 with 22 million copies sold, more Harry Potter on the way

WB Games is opening a new account at Gringotts
Hogwarts Legacy closed 2023 with 22 million copies sold, more Harry Potter on the way
Hogwarts Legacy closed 2023 with 22 million copies sold, more Harry Potter on the way /

Publisher Warner Bros. Games revealed that Hogwarts Legacy sold 22 million copies in 2023 with two million games being purchased during the holiday season alone. It’s a very impressive result for the open-world RPG set in the 1800s Wizarding World that was released in February 2023.

According to a Variety interview with CEO David Haddad, more Wizarding World content is on the way – and not just the already announced Quidditch game. The WB Games boss is quoted as saying that “a series of other things” is currently in development that “will let the fans be part of this world and stories and characters in deeper and deeper ways.”

Close capture footage of an owl.
Hogwarts Legacy made a killing in 2023 / Avalanche Software

Hogwarts Legacy’s success should also have been a reminder that well-executed single-player games can be massive successes and live service isn’t the end-all-be-all. However, the bosses at Warner Bros. Discovery (and, presumably, the shareholders) have a different opinion. During the company’s latest earnings call, CEO David Zaslav called for more live service games to be put out by the games division to maximize player engagement and earnings. He also ordered a focus on Warner Bros. IP.

Haddad stated towards Variety that WB Games had gotten the message: “A very consistent message coming from the executive layer of Warner Bros. Discovery is the importance of franchises. There’s a unique and important role games have in keeping our franchises relevant, resonant and exciting because there’s plenty of fans and plenty of people consuming content where games are their starting point, it’s their preferred form of content.”

“When you ask what our goals are, it’s really that macro goal of making sure that we get as much engagement with the fans as possible using content and releases and updates and live services,” he continued, falling in line.

WB Games up to this point has had a bit of an on-off-relationship with live service games. It’s primarily known for great single-player experiences like the Batman Arkham trilogy and Hogwarts Legacy, but the upcoming Suicide Squad is geared towards the live service direction and looks to be dead on arrival after several delays and controversies. Its upcoming Wonder Woman title will – contrasting the new policy – not be a live service game. And then there is the curious case of MultiVersus, the free-to-play platform fighter that was tested with much success in 2022 and then suddenly taken offline again with fans grumbling about how the live service aspect was handled. It’s not exactly easy terrain to traverse.

All Demiguise Moon locations in Hogwarts Legacy


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Marco Wutz
MARCO WUTZ

Marco Wutz is a writer from Parkstetten, Germany. He has a degree in Ancient History and a particular love for real-time and turn-based strategy games like StarCraft, Age of Empires, Total War, Age of Wonders, Crusader Kings, and Civilization as well as a soft spot for Genshin Impact and Honkai: Star Rail. He began covering StarCraft 2 as a writer in 2011 for the largest German community around the game and hosted a live tournament on a stage at gamescom 2014 before he went on to work for Bonjwa, one of the country's biggest Twitch channels. He branched out to write in English in 2015 by joining tl.net, the global center of the StarCraft scene run by Team Liquid, which was nominated as the Best Coverage Website of the Year at the Esports Industry Awards in 2017. He worked as a translator on The Crusader Stands Watch, a biography in memory of Dennis "INTERNETHULK" Hawelka, and provided live coverage of many StarCraft 2 events on the social channels of tl.net as well as DreamHack, the world's largest gaming festival. From there, he transitioned into writing about the games industry in general after his graduation, joining GLHF, a content agency specializing in video games coverage for media partners across the globe, in 2021. He has also written for NGL.ONE, kicker, ComputerBild, USA Today's ForTheWin, The Sun, Men's Journal, and Parade. Email: marco.wutz@glhf.gg