Mobile devices are changing the gaming industry. Portable gaming platforms such as Sony's (NYSE: SNE) PSP and Nintendo's Game Boy have taken a back seat to devices such as Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone and iPad -- leaving top video-game retailer GameStop (NYSE: GME) to either sink or swim. As GameStop braves uncharted waters to integrate Apple's iOS devices with its trade-in program, smart acquisitions could keep the company afloat.  

The Apple of GameStop's eye
The company's plans to begin selling iPhones, iPods, and iPads are part of its digital strategy to adapt to the shift toward mobile and online gaming. Apple's devices enable on-the-go downloading of tens of thousands of games through the App Store -- a far cry from GameStop's business model. GameStop's livelihood once depended on the buying and selling of video-game cartridges for non-mobile console platforms like Microsoft's Xbox.  However, recent acquisitions tell a different story.

Gaming with the times
GameStop is making meaningful strategic improvements to work with game publishers on downloadable content -- like joining forces with Activision Blizzard (Nasdaq: ATVI) and Microsoft on the Escalation pack for the Xbox 360 version of Call of Duty. With more than 200,000 codes sold in the first week, the Escalation launch was GameStop's best-selling downloadable offering -- giving GameStop the impetus to expand further into the digital realm.

The mobile-gaming market should reach $18 billion by 2014, according to a study by Pyramid Research. GameStop sees the writing on the wall. It acquired Spawn Labs, a company that specializes in streaming games online, and Impulse, a digital-distribution company. Spawn's service, in particular, provides the tools GameStop needs to get its cloud gaming service up and running. By remotely hosting games in the cloud and streaming to your iPad or iPhone, storage space on users' devices is no longer wasted on downloadable content. GameStop's Spawn service is scheduled to fully launch by mid-2012 -- giving gamers plenty of time to ante up with iOS trade-ins before gaming on the cloud.

All bets are on
Smartphones with access to cloud services over the Internet are driving the demand for mobile gaming. In 2008, mobile-gaming revenue tallied $6.9 billion, showing stable growth alongside expanded mobile access. To cope with the rise of smartphones, GameStop is stepping outside its box of physical game cartridges and into the choppy waters of mobile gaming. True, the stakes are high for GameStop -- its used-games segment accounts for 36% of sales. However, the company's 69% year-over-year increase in digital sales should see an even greater upside as acquisitions become fully integrated. Remember: The higher the risk, the higher the return. I invite you to share your thoughts with me in the comments section below. Game on.