Call of Duty Mobile revenue tracking shows the game’s 2026 strength
Statista updated Call of Duty: Mobile’s revenue line through August 2025, a sign Activision still treats it like a core mobile earner.

Call of Duty: Mobile is still being tracked as a worldwide in-app purchase business, not a fading side mode, and that says plenty about Activision’s mobile priorities. Statista’s dataset now covers October 2019 through August 2025, with a September 2025 release date and a research update on May 13, 2026. The figures cover Google Play and Apple App Store, and they strip out platform fees and inclusive taxes, which makes the page a cleaner look at the game’s real mobile appetite.
That appetite has not looked small for a long time. Statista says Call of Duty: Mobile first launched on Android and iOS on October 1, 2019, and by 2026 it was still important enough to merit fresh tracking. Industry reporting in 2025 put the game past $3 billion in lifetime revenue and past 1 billion downloads, while earlier reporting in November 2024 said Activision had already announced more than 1 billion downloads worldwide. That is not the profile of a forgotten spin-off. It is the profile of a live-service pillar that still has to earn its keep.

Activision’s own messaging backs that up. The official Call of Duty site still sells Call of Duty: Mobile as a free mobile FPS with battle royale and multiplayer, and the company marked the game’s 6th anniversary in December 2025 with Season 11, calling it the biggest gameplay update of the year. That update added DMZ: Recon, an extraction mode built for players who want more than quick-match shooting, along with a Street Fighter collaboration that showed Activision still sees crossover cosmetics as part of the playbook.
The cadence kept pushing after that. Season 7: Phantom Current arrived on July 30, 2025 and introduced Gulag to Battle Royale for the first time, and Jeff Gullett later said another large Battle Royale map is coming with Gulag set for a big return. Put together, the revenue tracking, anniversary push, and mode additions point to the same thing: Call of Duty: Mobile is still under monetization pressure, but it is also still being built like a game Activision expects to support for the long haul.
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