Flurry: China Accounts For 24% Of The World’s Connected Devices, With 261.3M Active Smartphones And Tablets

Flurry last year noted that China became the world’s fastest growing market for iOS and Android devices and today there is no sign of that slowing down. China now accounts for 24% of all of the connected devices in use worldwide, with 261,333,271 smartphones and tablets among them. Flurry released the data as part of a new report on smartphone usage in China, released today to coincide with a new deal with Renren Games, the online gaming distribution platform of the Chinese social network of the same name.

While Flurry has made a name for itself in charting worldwide and U.S. trends in app store usage, this is the first time that the company has drilled down into what is getting used in China. That is a service that Flurry may be providing more regularly now that it is working with Renren, where it will be providing developers on Renren’s platform more information about games usage following a lot of the metrics hat Flurry provides to other app developers, including active user numbers, player retention stats and other information about in-app events. It will also offer its AppSpot monetizing platform alongside Renren’s own Ader ad network.

Concentrating more on China, however, should come as no surprise. Given how much the market there is growing, developers offering apps there will be looking to get more sophisticated data on how the market is performing overall.

Here are some of the key takeaways from Flurry’s report, which is based on a random sampling of over 18,000 iOS and Android smartphones in the market.

Gaming is by far the biggest app activity in China today. On Android, some 56% of users’ time is spent in gaming apps, compared to 47% on iOS. Both are fairly far ahead of the next-most popular categories on each platform. There, the numbers begin to diverge and point to how each platform appears to be aimed at different platforms, with entertainment the next biggest on Android (20%) and Newsstand at 30% on iOS — no small part due to the Newsstand being a very popular destination on iPad tablets. With Apple’s earnings out today, it will be interesting to see if iPad usage or Newsstand performance specifically come up in Cook’s regular remarks on how China is performing.

flurry china apps

For now, it looks like gaming is proportionately more interesting to Chinese consumers compared to those in the U.S. Figures from April 2013 found that consumers here only spent about 32% of app time in gaming apps, with 18% on Facebook. That still made gaming the most popular category, but far less so. Telling that social networking is only grabbing a couple of percentage points on time on either platform, too small to even get a breakout number in Flurry’s graphic.

Yes, it’s an Apple/Samsung race right now, but eyes out for Xaomi. Last week Xiaomi, the Chinese Android handset maker whose flagship device is likened to the iPhone in terms of form factor, reported over $2 billion in revenue for the first half of the year, passing its total revenues for all of 2012. Flurry provides some numbers that is showing how this is playing out in terms of handset penetration. It is at 6%, the only other brand big enough to be worth breaking out after the big two. Interesting to note that while Samsung is clearly the biggest Android device maker, in terms of the installed base, there are significantly more Apple devices than Samsung devices in circulation, even if overall Android is far bigger, at 65% to Apple’s 35%.

Again, tablets are proving to be a significant engine for growth or iOS in China in terms of device penetration. Flurry notes that some 21% of all iOS devices were iPad tablets, compared to only 4% of Android devices; Xiaomi is reportedly eyeing up releasing its first tablet, as well as extending outside of the Chinese market.

flurry handsets china

More to come.