AdSense ads wind their way into Flash games

By Jacqueline Emigh | Published October 8, 2008, 3:08 PM

After initial testing with social media game maker Playfish, Google is now launching a beta that will include Sprint and Sony as advertisers and Zynga and Konami as game creators. Is this the beginning of an ad-supported virtual world?

Can online gaming and advertising co-exist, or will gamers tune out the ad-supported games at too intrusive? Google will soon find out, with the beta rollout of AdSense for Games software.

The games with the ads will be based on Adobe's Flash, running in a Web browser with no extra software downloaded on the player's end. According to some industry estimates, online gamers are already playing about 200 million rounds of Flash games each month.

Before launching the beta, Google reportedly tested in-game ads with partners that included Playfish, the creator of games such as "Who Has the Biggest Brain?" on Facebook.

At the outset, Google's software will be used in about 25 ad-supported, social media-oriented games, from publishers that will include Playfish, Zynga, and Japanese-based Konami. Konami's ad-supported games will include classic titles such as "Frogger," along with "Track and Field" and "Dance Dance Dance Revolution."

After each game session, Google's software will run a 30-second video spot in which a game character will mention the name of the advertising sponsor. So far, Sprint, Sony Pictures, and and eSurance have signed on as advertisers.

Analyst firm the Yankee Group has forecast the ad-supported online games market to reach $971.3 million three years from now. Some observers also predict that ads will become part of the games themselves, with players inserting ads into billboards in game environments.

Overt advertising, however, hasn't gone over very well on social networking sites, with many users complaining that the ads are an unwelcome distraction from their interactions with online friends.

In efforts to make online ads more palatable, some advertisers have already sought to insert their brands into social media in more subtle ways, collectively referred to as "immersive advertising."

As previously reported in BetaNews, on MTV's VLES site, kids in chat rooms have been sipping on "virtual Pepsis." At Gaia Online, teens and 20-somethings have been dressing up avatars in virtual Disney T-Shirts.

Clearly, Google already has bigger plans in mind than just the 30-second video spots. "As a beta user of AdSense for Games, you can display video ads, image ads, or text ads within your online games to earn revenue. You'll be able to show these ads in placements you define, such as interstitial frames before a game, after a level change, or when a game is over," says a blurb on the AdSense for Games beta Web site.

"Members of our AdWords team will sell your in-game ad placements directly to top brand advertisers, and you'll also see contextually targeted text and image ads based on content and demographic information. In addition, you'll be able to control the ads you see on your pages using our filtering options."

Only time will tell how successful these various Google-conjectured ad approaches will actually be with online gamers.

Meanwhile, early last year, Google acquired in-game ad firm Adscape Media, and rumors persist that Google will ultimately build an ad-supported virtual world.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

My partner plays ad-games every night and finds the ads not affecting her playing the game,in fact she finds them most amusing.

Score: 0

|

This is definetly going to see some interesting effects on some niches in the internet marketing world. The ways to display them sound really interesting, placements at certain intervals and what not. I'd love to be able to rip this up and certainly will once it goes public

JustinDupre.com - Affiliate Marketing With An Attitude

Score: 0

|

A real beta process at work: Mozilla fires up Firefox 3.6 Beta 2

In the clearest sign yet that public input really does help the development process, a flurry of bug detections provoked Mozilla to release Beta 2 of the next Firefox.

Snow Leopard and Windows 7 still can't crack the netbook problem

Apple has killed Atom support in OS X 10.6.2 and Windows 7 Starter Edition is stripped of "basic" functionality.

Microsoft's Top 3 advances in Exchange Server 2010

The latest round of changes launched today will impact how admins deliver services to e-mail recipients, and how much companies will pay along the way.

Firefox turns five: Thanks for giving us a choice

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: No longer the phoenix rising from the ashes, Mozilla has carried on more than just Netscape's legacy.

Kindle for PC opens in beta, underwhelms

Amazon has opened the beta of Kindle for PC, a companion to the Kindle, but little else.

European ministers approve watered-down 'neutral net' language

The latest provision in the EU's telecoms regulatory framework would let businesses cancel individuals' Internet access, if they go to court first.

It's the US vs. the EU over Oracle+Sun and the meaning of 'open source'

Now that the EU is a virtual country, the US Justice Dept. is taking a stand in favor of its view -- and against the EC's -- that MySQL will survive under Oracle.

Qualcomm: $1.3 billion Samsung licensing deal unrelated to fair trade violations

Samsung has come to a 15-year licensing deal with Qualcomm over 3G and 4G wireless technology.

Nokia's 'limited number' of recalled chargers exceeds 14 million

Today, the Finnish phone maker has begun a recall of mobile phone chargers that are a shock hazard.

Ubuntu 9.10 upgraders report frustration

For those Wine aficionados out there, beware of the remote possibility that your Linux system could be infected by Windows-seeking malware.

Supreme Court considers patentability of abstract methods today

Can software that executes a formula for a business process qualify for federal patents? An appeals court already said no, and inventors are making their case.