Market (Mobile)ยทUpdated Jun 25, 2026 by Sensor Tower
Mobile game advertising in the U.S. remained resilient through H1 2021, showing no immediate negative impact from IDFA privacy changes.
Mobile games continue to dominate the share of voice across major ad networks, with platforms like AppLovin, MoPub, Facebook, AdMob, and Unity reporting an increased focus on gaming-related advertisements.
Successful user acquisition strategies are increasingly dependent on matching specific game genres to networks with compatible demographics, such as YouTube for younger, male-dominated strategy/RPG audiences and Adcolony for older, female-focused casino players.
While video remains the primary creative format, mid-core titles like Call of Duty: Mobile and State of Survival are increasingly adopting playable ads, a format previously limited to hypercasual and puzzle games.
Publishers are shifting toward creative experimentation, incorporating tactics such as relaxing background music for casual titles and real-world conversational ads that emphasize social proof or financial rewards.
The industry is moving away from traditional video formats toward interactive and narrative-driven advertising techniques designed to capitalize on player psychology and specific genre appeal.
Mobile game advertising in the U.S. remained resilient through H1 2021, showing no immediate negative impact from IDFA privacy changes.
Mobile games continue to dominate the share of voice across major ad networks, with platforms like AppLovin, MoPub, Facebook, AdMob, and Unity reporting an increased focus on gaming-related advertisements.
Successful user acquisition strategies are increasingly dependent on matching specific game genres to networks with compatible demographics, such as YouTube for younger, male-dominated strategy/RPG audiences and Adcolony for older, female-focused casino players.
While video remains the primary creative format, mid-core titles like Call of Duty: Mobile and State of Survival are increasingly adopting playable ads, a format previously limited to hypercasual and puzzle games.
Publishers are shifting toward creative experimentation, incorporating tactics such as relaxing background music for casual titles and real-world conversational ads that emphasize social proof or financial rewards.
The industry is moving away from traditional video formats toward interactive and narrative-driven advertising techniques designed to capitalize on player psychology and specific genre appeal.