The 2023 national survey of Brazil’s game‑development ecosystem maps the sector as it stood in 2022, revealing a vibrant but highly fragmented industry dominated by micro‑ and small studios. With 1,042 active studios and a representative sample of 309 developers, 214 freelancers and 80 support organisations, the market expanded despite a 5.1 % contraction in the global games market, delivering a 3 % domestic growth that lifted the industry to US $182.9 bn in 2022 and projecting US $206.4 bn by 2025. Brazil ranks fifth worldwide in online population, hosting roughly 103 million gamers; revenue generation is led by mobile (49 %), followed by PC (26 %) and consoles (25 %), while gender parity approaches equality with women accounting for 46.2 % of players. Export orientation is emerging, as 76 % of developers target the domestic market but substantial shares also aim at the United States (58 %), Latin America (57 %) and Western Europe (55 %). Prospects for the next three years show Canada and Latin America each featuring in 47 % of sales roadmaps, with China appearing in 44 % of plans, indicating a gradual diversification of export destinations. The sector is supported by 17 regional industry associations and coordinated nationally by Abragames, Brazil Games and ApexBrasil, which provide market representation, business‑matching missions and participation in overseas fairs. Artificial intelligence dominates technology priorities, cited by more than half of respondents as a short‑ and long‑term focus, while XR/VR/AR follows closely, driven by 5G and new engines such as Unreal Engine 5. Interest in blockchain and