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Among other things, the ex-employee says some customers spent outlandish sums on virtual goods and services in many games — including one user who spent $100,000 on Mafia Wars.
The alleged ex-Zynga employee goes by the handle “mercenary-games” on Reddit and began posting about a day ago. He says he worked at Zynga for eight months but that he quit the company six months ago.
The person makes many claims about the game company, but one of the most eyebrow-raising is the alleged amounts of actual dollars some of its customers spend playing the games through Facebook. He says he’s seen someone spend $20,000 on FrontierVille and another player “commit” up to $100,000 on Mafia Wars. Further, Zynga has a special name for players who spend in excess of $10,000: Zynga Black.
The company supposedly focuses almost all of its attention on players who spend money, treating those who play for free as “spam.” The post author claims those players are the “hardcore” crowd, to whom Zynga caters, tweaking features to encourage gameplay habits that bring in the most money.
The post, filled with unsubstantiated claims about Zynga corporate culture, sparked a lot of heated discussion. A few other posters claim to be current Zynga employees and, while some refute the author’s claims, others support them.
The alleged revelations about how Zynga makes money parallel somewhat with Facebook’s recent IPO filing. Just as Facebook revealed its interdependence on Zynga for a significant part of its income as a potential weakness, Zynga’s dependence on what the author calls “addicts” put a great deal of financial control in the hands of a small group.
Do you spend money on Zynga games? What’s the most you’ve ever spent and what did you buy? Let us know in the comments.
Unlike most year-end lists, this one actually has quite a few surprises. I fully expected CityVille, Zynga’s hit social game, to top the list. Nope. According to Facebook’s measurements, that honor belongs to Gardens of Time.
In the update announcing the list, Facebook does say it is basing its ranking on “games that drew the most active users and received the highest user recommendations.”
That probably accounts for some of the discrepancies we found against other Facebook app data sources, like AppData.com. According to AppData, CityVille is the most popular game with 48.8 million monthly active users. Conversely, Gardens of Time ranks much further down the list with 8.5 million monthly active users.
Accounting questions aside, here are Facebook’s ten most popular games of 2011:
What Facebook game got your attention this year? Let us know.
Image via Wikipedia
Google is reportedly partnering with FarmVille and Mafia Wars game-maker Zynga to launch a hub where you’ll be able to play social online games.
The source of the rumor is the tech blog TechCrunch, which claims to have confirmed the story with multiple sources. The search giant has allegedly invested between 100 and 200 million dollars in the massive game company, which already sits with Google (
) in the small club of web companies that are valued at much more than $1 billion.
Details on the new portal (which TechCrunch calls “Google Games”) are few and far between. The best hints you’ll find are in a job posting for position at the top of Google’s Games division. The “Project Management Leader, Games” would develop a “games commerce product strategy” through both partnerships and in-house projects of one kind or another. The job posting also specifies that both web-based and mobile games are part of the plan.
We’ve contacted both Google and Zynga seeking more details about the deal and what to expect from both companies in the future.
MySpace (), Facebook (
) and Yahoo (
) also host Zynga games, so any web game player is going to wonder what Google will offer that they can’t already get at the company’s three big competitors. We don’t know yet and to be frank, Google is very late to the game — excuse the pun!
The term “games commerce product” would seem to imply that Google is considering making money not just through ads but through microtransactions — small purchases of virtual goods made within games. Those are common in today’s web-based games, Zynga’s titles included.
Google’s partnership with Zynga might involve Google Checkout, a PayPal-like online transactions tool that was launched four years ago. You might recall that Zynga and Facebook announced a similar deal that expanded the use of Facebook’s own microtransactions system, called Facebook Credits.
Rumor has it that Google is also planning another user profiles push to challenge Facebook, and popular online games could help drive adoption of that network, so it’s easy to see why Google is interested in entering this space. However, none of this explains why we’ll want to play at Google’s portal instead of Facebook’s.
We’ll just have to wait to find out how Google plans to woo online gamers. Do you have any guesses? Let us know in the comments.
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