TCP is convenient, but you pay for that simplicity in overhead. Every TCP packet is going to send an ACK packet saying "thank you" and telling the sender they got that segment #. These ACK packets, in the case of a big download, represent a lot of traffic. Remember that the internet on the main loses only around 1 out of 1000 packets, so verifying the transmission of each packet individually is mostly wasted information. Most of the cleverest games use UDP, and tightly pack the sent packet, using the most bit-twiddly tricks there are. Have a number that only goes 1..10?, then you use 4 bits only.
They also combine data from multiple packets into one packet so that they get max throughput. It is the # of packets per second that is really the limiting factor, and as long as you keep the packet size under the max for a non-split packet (which is not exactly 1500 but slightly less, and a tricky thing to determine) you can squeeze the most out of the transport hardware. For casual games with smaller users bases, it might not matter, but these massive multiplayer games have some of the biggest user bases in the whole world, and when you get to large numbers of users, wasteful transport mechanisms will require expensive server farms.
With enough good old fashioned bit twiddling, you can squeeze down the info you transport, and support massive numbers of users, but many people just want to move data from point A to B and not think about it much, which is why TCP is around. I particularly don't like how long TCP takes to recognize things have gone south, and am of the old-fashioned mentality that you should have total control of the process, and UDP is incredibly simple.
Another thing i like about UDP is that you can tell when the connection has gone crappy, and can warn the user. TCP conceals the problems from you to a great extent, and using UDP means you can inform the user that their play is being degraded. It is much nicer to the user to let them know their internet connection is lousy than having them think your game is lousy.
TCP has many compromises in it. It was very cleverly designed to handle flow control (kinda), and error correction, but for most games it is very inefficient. You would be shocked at how few people in the game industry know the network guts well; it is a small group of people who build the networking modules for many games, because it is really is a tricky sub-area. Unfortunately when you go to the web platform all you have is HTTP, which isn't even full TCP, and UDP is banned for security reasons.