Nielsen  is out with its annual survey of video game use in the US today, and  it's found that gaming continues to be on the rise across the board.  That includes a seven percent increase in total gaming time compared to  the previous year (apparently due largely to increases in mobile and  tablet gaming), and an increase in modern console ownership from 50  percent of households to 56 percent; that includes so-called 7th  generation consoles like the Wii, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. It also  found the number of cross-platform gamers be on the upswing, with 24  percent responding that they play on two or more of a console, PC,  tablet or mobile device (compared to 17 percent previously). Looking at  mobile gaming, specifically, Nieslen found that while iOS gaming tended  to be distributed fairly evenly across all age groups, Android gaming  proved to be far more popular among those aged 25-34 than any other  group.
A few other tidbits: 65 percent of consoles are located in the living room, online shopping for games is up while other channels continue to decline, and streaming video continues to be a growing secondary use for game consoles (particularly on the Wii, where it accounts for 33 percent of console usage, compared to roughly 15 percent on both the Xbox 360 and PS3).
A few other tidbits: 65 percent of consoles are located in the living room, online shopping for games is up while other channels continue to decline, and streaming video continues to be a growing secondary use for game consoles (particularly on the Wii, where it accounts for 33 percent of console usage, compared to roughly 15 percent on both the Xbox 360 and PS3).
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