Hybrid-Casual Publisher Analysis — December 2025

Business simulation idle - Eatventures template

Hybrid-casual continues to mature into one of the most competitive and execution-driven segments of mobile gaming. December 2025 data highlights a clear concentration of revenue among publishers who have mastered scalable templates, efficient user acquisition, and long-term live-ops optimization.

Want to become a paid subscriber for our premium monthly reports?
📩 Get in touch: vamsi@nextbiggames.com

Below is the complete hybrid-casual publisher revenue snapshot for December 2025, showing where market power is currently concentrated and how steep the competitive curve has become.


Hybrid-Casual Publisher Revenue Leaderboard

Rollic — $17,518,249
Rollic continues to dominate the hybrid-casual category by a significant margin, setting the benchmark for template-driven execution and rapid scaling.

iKame Global — $8,630,028
iKame Global holds a strong second position, reflecting consistent performance across multiple hybrid-casual formats.

Voodoo — $8,347,953
Voodoo remains one of the most reliable scalers in the market, blending experimentation with proven monetization loops.

Loom Games — $8,163,564
Loom Games maintains momentum with strong creative iteration and genre focus.

SayGames — $7,532,258
SayGames continues to adapt successfully into hybrid-casual, leveraging recognizable mechanics with deeper progression.

Homa — $6,891,072
Homa’s steady revenue reflects disciplined publishing and long-term optimization across its portfolio.

1soft — $5,545,307
1soft shows strong mid-tier scaling, driven by consistent releases and targeted genre bets.

Lion Studios (a Tripledot Studio) — $4,801,991
Lion Studios benefits from Tripledot’s operational expertise, maintaining stable hybrid-casual output.

AppQuantum — $4,608,880
AppQuantum continues to push hybrid experimentation while sustaining healthy monetization.

CrazyLabs — $3,213,680
CrazyLabs remains competitive through rapid iteration and broad creative testing.

ABI Game Studio — $2,355,933
ABI Game Studio’s performance highlights its growing footprint in puzzle-driven hybrid titles.

PixOn Game Studio — $1,840,261
PixOn demonstrates promising traction with focused genre exploration.

Supersonic from Unity — $1,282,793
Supersonic’s results reflect selective scaling and cautious portfolio expansion.

BoomBit — $1,191,872
BoomBit continues to compete with hybrid adaptations of its established IPs.

Supercent — $1,082,560
Supercent’s numbers show ongoing engagement with hybrid formats alongside hyper-casual roots.

Playvalve — $397,885
Playvalve remains in the early stages of hybrid monetization maturity.

TapNation — $362,268
TapNation continues experimenting with hybrid mechanics, with room for further scale.

IEC Games — $150,236
IEC Games rounds out the list, reflecting early-stage hybrid performance.


Key Takeaways

December 2025 clearly demonstrates that hybrid-casual is no longer a volume game—it’s a precision game. Revenue concentration at the top shows that success now depends on template refinement, UA efficiency, and monetization depth, rather than sheer release volume.

As competition intensifies, only publishers with repeatable scaling systems will continue to pull ahead.

All insights are powered by AppMagic’s market intelligence data

📨 Get Exclusive Reports

Perfect for developers, publishers, investors, and mobile gaming enthusiasts looking to stay updated on what’s scaling, what’s trending, and where the next big opportunity is emerging.

Share this page with
Facebook
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
X

Unlocking tomorrow’s hits today: Trend insights , market research and ideation services for game studios.

Discover more from NextBigGames

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading