Shares of EA sank 18 percent in after-hours trading following the news.

Game franchises like "Battlefield" and "FIFA" are among EA's most iconic, but the rapid rise of online, often free-to-play games with engaging formats are challenging the dominance of EA, Activision Blizzard and Take-Two Interactive Software Inc.

"The video game industry continues to grow through a year of intense competition and transformational change," Chief Executive Andrew Wilson said in a statement.

"Q3 was a difficult quarter for Electronic Arts and we did not perform to our expectations," he added, referring to EA's results for the final three months of 2018.

"Battlefield V" had poor sales in the quarter, EA executives said. The fifth installment in the franchise was launched in November, a month later than planned, because of delays in development.

"We think (postponing the Battlefield launch) was the right decision, but it put us in the middle of a very discounted holiday season," EA Chief Financial Officer Blake Jorgensen said in an interview. "We probably sold about a million units less than we thought we would."

Data from research firm NPD showed that "Battlefield V" lagged Activision's "Call of Duty: Black Ops 4" and Take-Two's "Red Dead Redemption 2" in dollar sales during December.

Launching "Battlefield V" in just a single-player mode rather than offering a battle royale version also likely hurt sales, Jorgensen said.

The battle royale format in multi-player gaming, which allows dozens of players to battle each other to the death until the last survivor, became wildly popular in 2018 thanks to "PUBG" and Epic Games' "Fortnite," two games which are also credited with introducing newer audiences to gaming.

EA, meanwhile, announced its first free-to-play battle royale game, called Apex Legends, only on Monday.

For the third quarter that ended Dec. 31, EA reported adjusted revenue of $1.61 billion, well below Wall Street analysts' average estimate of $1.75 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

The Redwood City, California-based company cut its adjusted revenue projections for the year ending March to about $4.75 billion from $5.20 billion.

Jorgensen said sales from EA's mobile games also underwhelmed, with newly launched "Command and Conquer" performing below expectations.

(Reporting by Arjun Panchadar in Bengaluru; Editing by Sai Sachin Ravikumar)

By Arjun Panchadar