Less than a week after announcing having reached $1 billion in community funding, Cloud Imperium Games posted its worldwide accounting report for the year 2024. For the year, the developer of the upcoming games Squadron 42 and Star Citizen recorded $146.6 million in corporate income while spending $160.9 million, including just under $8 million in capital expenses and investments. Overall, CIG recorded a $14.3 million EBITDA loss when including CAPEX costs.
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| Financial positions from 2012-2024 |
The 2024 financial accounting finally confirms some things that up until now were just speculation. Poor performance in the form of recording losses of $34.5 million and payments of $3.1 million to minority investors in 2023-2024 is now very likely to explain the leadership shakeup at Cloud Imperium at the end of 2024 and beginning of 2025. The cumulative net position of -$28.2 million is proof that digital ship and vehicle sales were not enough to fund the development of Squadron 42 and Star Citizen alone.
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| Income from the 2024 financial accounting |
Total income grew by 3% to $147M reflecting the ongoing loyalty and engagement of our community. Pledges and counter income fell slightly by 3% to $116M – reflecting a year of fewer headline releases for much of the year as we concentrated on the significant technical features needed for the future of Star Citizen – the results of which we only delivered in the final quarter of 2024. However, subscriptions rose by 14% to $7.3M and other income (incentives, partnerships and credits) increased by a very significant 34% to $23M. The latter reflects the growing scale and value of our international development operations and the corresponding incentive and partnership income they generate, bolstered further by the third-party income arising from Turbulent’s existing external clients.
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| Turbulent no longer counts as a contractor |
Other income grew strongly by $5.9M (35%) to $23.0M. This reflects the maturing of our international development operations, with UK development credits and related incentive income continuing to grow, as well as expanding partnership and hardware/software vendor income. This income line was further bolstered by a full year of Turbulent income including their local incentives and their existing web service business. This other income represents an increasingly important and diversified income stream, for the Group.
One significant fact I need to highlight is the actual reduction in spending by CIG in 2024. From 2020-2023 spending rose by over 100%, from $80.9 million to $163.1 million over the course of 3 years. Let's return to the CFO for an overview on the company's spending.
2024 was the year in which the cost rationalisation implicit in our 2023 strategic decisions began to crystallise. Total trading costs fell by $3.1M (2%) to $152.9M, a modest reduction in absolute terms but one that masks some significant and deliberate shifts in cost composition.The dominant structural feature of the 2024 cost base is the sharp fall in contracted game development costs, which fell by $7.0M (56%) to $5.5M as the Turbulent team, fully integrated into the group from the second half of 2023, replaced what had previously been externally contracted development services. This was always the intended outcome of the Turbulent acquisition and represents a significant return on that investment.Salary and overhead costs in the Rest of World segment continued to grow as Manchester consolidated its position as the hub of our development operations, but the rate of growth moderated compared to prior years. US costs across all categories either held flat or reduced, reflecting the ongoing transfer of development activity out of the United States and the consolidation of publishing activities out of Los Angeles and into Austin.
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| Labor costs continue to increase |
Total employee headcount fell 5% in 2024, from 1085 down to 1031. Perhaps surprisingly, the number of developers fell by 4% down to 695. But the number of employees in the publishing ops, community events, and marketing departments rose by 24% up to 258. For those unfamiliar with gaming categories, publishing usually includes those tasked with keeping the servers physically running. I should also add that finding and keeping talented server and network techs is a lot more expensive that finding code monkeys. At least at the businesses I've worked at.
The improvement in the annual loss from ($20.2M) in 2023 to ($14.3M) in 2024 reflects the operational improvements achieved through cost rationalisation, partly offset by continued investment in our Rest of World capability. The pre-capex position improved more dramatically still, from ($13.1M) to ($6.3M), as capex remained broadly stable. The release of Star Citizen Alpha 4.0 in the fourth quarter of 2024 was a watershed moment for the project. The addition of the Pyro system and the initial phase of Server Meshing — technology first demonstrated at CitizenCon 2023 in Los Angeles — delivered on commitments made to our community and demonstrated the tangible return on the significant investment made over preceding years. As the Chairman noted in his 2024 letter, this is not merely the next iterative patch but a fundamental architectural advance: for the first time, the game runs across a mesh of servers covering the entire playable universe, with server boundaries invisible to players.
Looking to 2025, we expect to maintain the cost discipline established in 2024 while continuing to invest in the capabilities and infrastructure needed to deliver Squadron 42 and advance Star Citizen toward 1.0. The investments made in 2023 and 2024 created the foundation for parallel progress on both titles, while also improving the player experience in Star Citizen. That progress has already contributed to stronger player growth and engagement, helping deliver our best top-line performance to date in 2025. Our next priority is to build on this momentum while working to balance the business through to the release of these two highly anticipated games.






















