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subject: How Big Can Easily A Maker Of Online Video Games Get? [print this page]


Zynga is being trumpeted as the biggest new in Silicon Valley since Twitter and Facebook. There is one small distinction there - while Twitter is a terrific concept that helps link individuals, it doesn't actually make much in revenues. Farmville on the other hand is set to a rake in a half billion bucks in profits this year alone, offering artificial fertilizer and farm animals. To think that anyone might make that kind of cash on a free of charge Facebook game is quite shocking. If they started to charge something off every member, they might possibly expand even faster. And to think that they have actually expanded to this phase in a simple 2 years.

There can be problems that can easily go to such development prices though. Some players register to have everything they do on their virtual ranches delivered to their good friends as a Facebook update. That can be fairly tiring for the receivers of those updates. Millions of Facebook users recently banded together to join a group called "I don't care about your ranch". So, is Zynga the only creator of hit online video games on Facebook? There are tons of members out there who might like to duplicate Zynga's success for themselves.

The childishly simple characters and plots of Zynga's games that rake in much more funds than traditional high-tech videogames, have the gaming industry a little peeved. However they aren't about to sit on the sidelines and see these new designers enjoy all the action. Digital Arts, the producer of some excellent titles for the PlayStation and Xbox 360 has just bought Playfish, a Zynga competitor, for a half billion dollars, to establish itself in this new games atmosphere.

There was a kid in the news just recently who went and cleared his mother's credit card of thousands of bucks to purchase Farmville product; several Farmville subscribers have introduced a class action lawsuit against Zynga for the means it has signed them on for costly services that they did not ever request. It is all part of coming to be successful quickly in a globe of cutthroat competitors. In the symbiotic relationship that Facebook and Zynga take pleasure in, who requires whom a lot more, some individuals ask. One thing's pretty clear - about a third of all website visitors to Facebook come there specifically to play the games. It might be rather uncomplicated to speculate that they both needed each other.

by: katey y Francis




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