BBC article
15 minutes of fame over? This seems to be the trend with mobile games, I hope Konami and Nintendo have good long term plans for entering this market
Its especially risky for Komani, if their console fanbase abandons them and the mobile market decides it doesnt care about their IP they could be in a lot of trouble
Edit: a mod changed the title to add the money part, I didn't mean to hide or obscure that, I merely copied the article title the BBC used
Shares of the maker of popular mobile game Candy Crush fell as much as over 14% in after hours trading after it warned of weaker profits.
King Digital said it expects fluctuations in foreign currency and a lack of new releases to hold back its earnings in the current quarter.
The big drop in its shares came despite the release of first quarter sales figures that beat market expectations.
The firm has been struggling to increase market share.
King Digital's revenue fell 6.1% to $569.5m (£361m) in the first three months of the year from a year ago, but that was higher than analysts' forecasts of $563.4m.
However, the London-based game maker said its gross bookings, which is what players spend before costs such as app store fees - for the April to June period would be between $490m and $520m - below expectations.
"We look toward the remainder of the year, we expect the mid-year period to be seasonally softer, returning to growth trends in the latter part of the year," the company said in a statement on Thursday.
King Digital is launching a new game this year, but that will not be released until the later half of the year.
The company said that falls in both gross bookings and revenue in the first quarter were largely due to lower sales from its Candy Crush Saga and other "more mature games" - a sign that players are moving on to other games.
15 minutes of fame over? This seems to be the trend with mobile games, I hope Konami and Nintendo have good long term plans for entering this market
Its especially risky for Komani, if their console fanbase abandons them and the mobile market decides it doesnt care about their IP they could be in a lot of trouble
Edit: a mod changed the title to add the money part, I didn't mean to hide or obscure that, I merely copied the article title the BBC used