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Türkiye's domestic mobile revenue grew 6% to $347m in 2025

Turkish dveloper revenue increased by 450% over the past six years to $2.7 billion

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Image credit: Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

Türkiye's mobile revenue rose 6% in 2025 to $347 million, its highest annual total to date. Over the past six years, Turkish developer revenue has grown by 450% to $2.7 billion.

According to AppMagic's annual Turkish mobile report, produced with Gamigion, Türkiye's global market share rose from 1% to 5% alongside these revenue gains.

Downloads declined by 4% year-on-year to 1.8 billion, which AppMagic identifies as a shift from volume to monetisation in the mobile market.

The number of active developers in Türkiye increased by 18.6% in 2025, following a significant spike in 2022, when growth reached 105.5% year-on-year.

Dream Games was the top Turkish developer globally by revenue in 2025, reaching $1.7 billion, followed by Peak Games ($619.7 million), and Rollic ($207 million).

Dream Games and Peak Games generated over 80% of publisher revenue.

Dream Games alone contributed 60% of this total through its two titles, Royal Match and Royal Kingdom, which have together earned more than $5.2 billion in in-app purchases.

Puzzle games made up approximately 97% of Türkiye's mobile revenue. The top-grossing domestic titles were PUBG Mobile ($17.3 million), eFootball ($10.4 million), and Whiteout Survival ($10 million).

Since 2009, Turkish developers have raised $3.6 billion in funding.

Dream Games secured the largest investment in Turkish history in May, raising $2.5 billion in a round led by CVC Capital Partners.

Excluding Dream Games, investments in 2025 totaled $234 million, 32 times higher than in 2020.

This included Good Job Games raising $60 million, and Grand Games securing $30 million in January and an additional $70 million in May 2026.

Loom Games reached a valuation of over $1 billion in less than 12 months before its acquisition by Scopely in February 2026.

Leading domestic investors are the state-backed Türkiye Development Fund (163 investments), Boğaziçi Ventures (74), WePlay Ventures (24), Ludas Ventures (23, backing Spyke, Alpaka, and TaleMonster), and Laton Ventures (key backer of Grand Games).

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