Net bookings for the quarter totaled $1.818 billion, down 13% year-over-year, which the company attributes to the “extraordinary release” of College Football 25 in Q2 2025. Net revenue fell 9.2% from $2.025 billion last year to $1.839 billion, with approximately $1.221 billion (66%) coming from live services and $618 million from full game releases. The largest decline was in EA’s net income, which dropped a whopping 53.4% to $137 million from $294 million in Q2 2025.

Despite all key figures declining, EA expressed optimism about the successful early access launch of Skate 4 and the record-breaking performance of Battlefield 6, which was released in Q3 and is expected to pump those numbers up in the next financial report – if it ever gets published, that is.