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    Results tagged “advertising” from The Weekly Geek

    New World of Warcraft Advertisement

    The folks over at ActiBlizz or BlizzVis or ActiZard or whatever they're calling themselves these days have released another of those strange World of Warcraft commercials. The most recent features my favorite diminutive Hollywood star, Vern Troyer.

    There is something about that little man that fills my heart with a strange glee. Hit the jump for ads featuring Mister T and William Shatner, both just as excellent as Mr. Troyer's.

    continue reading "New World of Warcraft Advertisement"

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    I Am The Lawgiver!

    How about that, a commercial featuring gamers by a large corporation that manages to be hilarious and avoid derision. Kudos to Toyota for for avoiding the easy jokes.

    via Laughing Squid

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    1980's Video Game Advertisements

    burgertime.JPG

    Who else remembers the epic video game advertisements from the '80s? I don't, but that's mostly because I was more concerned with creating food based masterpieces and growing teeth. Check out the rest of these amazing adverts here.

    80's Game Advertisements via Laughing Squid

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    Podcast for Monday, October 9th - Halloween is the Only Time You Should Cosplay

    Welcome to this week's geek culture and gaming podcast show notes! How are you today? Great. This week, The Geek, White Mage and Frodo talk about how Sony is delusional again, naked wii photos, mii customization, the downfalls of console bashing and being a fanboy, in-game advertising is awesome buy Mountain Dew, Nerf game controllers, the Daily Show, The Evil Dead Musical, halloween tips and stuff! STUFF! IT'S EVERYWHERE!

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    Gamers Hate In Game Advertising

    WoW! I sure do love Coke (tm)A recent video game survey sponsored by Activision came to the conclusion that gamers actually liked in-game advertising, saying that it added to the immersion and made video games more realistic. Now, Ars Technica is saying that is not the case, taking a deeper look from a newer survey not sponsored by someone with a vested interest in the subject. comScore Media Metrix actually found that the majority of gamers do not agree that in-game advertising makes it more realistic, and Ars Technica does a good job of pushing past the bull and taking an objective look at how much revenue in-game advertising actually brings in.

    Personally, I don't mind in-game advertising as long as it is believable. If I am meant to think that I am in a real city or something, I fully expect there to be Coca-Cola billboards and a Starbucks on the corner. That is immersion. On the other hand, it would be completely out of place in, say, World of Warcraft. While I don't think we should be forced to collect Mountain Dew cans in all snowboarding games, I think that a little bit of believable advertising is great. As long as it fits. What do you think? Have you seen some horrible advertising in games in completely innapropriate places? Post in the comments!

    Link to the full article (Ars Technica, via Digg)

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    Today's Rant: Wii Parties Are Pointless

    Wii Party picture from picturethis.clubmom.comNintendo has recently rolled out a new marketing campaign focused on getting non-gamer types hyped up about the Wii. Nintendo has asked various non-gaming bloggers to be ambassadors for their new console. These "Wii Ambassador Parties" are like modern Tupperware parties and seem like a good idea. With the Wii's emphasis on multiplayer and casual content, getting people who wouldn't normally play a video game to play a video game seems like marketing dollars well-spent. From a marketer's standpoint, however, these parties suck and this has been proven with the first Wii Ambassador write up over at Club Mom.

    Tracey C. was recently invited by Nintendo to be a Wii Ambassador and welcomed a group of Nintendo reps into her home, who then provided her with 4 tvs, 4 Wii consoles and plenty of food and drink to have a swinging party. According to Tracy's write up they dazzled her and the 35 invited people with freebies. Everyone had a grand old time. Tracy then wrote about the party on her blog. This is what Nintendo was going for, right? Tracy even mentions in her blog:

    ...Nintendo won me over. And I think I can say the same for the 35 other people that we're here. I'll betcha half of them have already pre-ordered their Wii Systems (which won't be available to the public until Nov. 19th). Which is I'm sure what this party set out to do.

    Tracy focuses on the amount of free stuff that Nintendo gave her and her partygoers instead of focusing on why someone should give the Wii a chance. She goes on and on about Nintendo's hospitality and how they bought her free mexican food and booze, and gave the kids free DS Lite systems and games, she only mentions liking the Wii a couple times, and never in any qualitative manner.

    "It was pretty impressive, I must say. And I'm one mom who is not easily impressed with these kinds of things. "

    What does that mean for the average consumer? Not much.

    The fact that 35 people at her party supposedly are going to preorder the Wii, and she was "impressed" sways no one. That's only 35 people that Nintendo sold with this party, at how much expense? If anything Tracy's write up was a ringing endorsement for the size of Nintendo's expense account. Here is how to do these parties right: TELL THE BLOGGER TO TALK ABOUT THE WII. Or at least get good writers. A good writer will keep all the "perks" of the event in the background, focusing on the subject at hand. Here we see a regular ol' mom talking about a fun party she had. She doesn't know better. Regular people don't know better. You spend all this time and money dazzling them with free stuff (like media usually gets, I might add) and they will focus on the free stuff. That's it.

    I am not sure if the actual solution is to get gamers to host these parties or to just coach the bloggers a bit on some basic internet marketing, but as far as I am concerned their first Wii party was a failure. Not for Tracy (who I am sure had a freaking blast) but for the marketing strategy Nintendo is trying to accomplish here.

    Like this rant? Digg it.

    (image taken from http://picturethis.clubmom.com/)

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    Pimpin the Sponsors

    Apple iTunes

    Ok, so we don't really have sponsors. But we have ads now. The Weekly Geek is a completely FREE podcast and blog supported by YOU. We don't have any huge corporate sponsors, everything is out of pocket and ad-supported. We do it as a labor of love, but a little help with the bandwidth would be nice. So, if you like the show, please click on our banners, make use of our donation buttons at the bottom of the page or check out some merch in our store. Every little bit helps, and the more support we get the better our show can become!

    We recently signed up to be an iTunes affiliate, so if you buy anything on iTunes, click one of our banners like the one you see there, and if you make a purchase on iTunes within 24 hours, we get a small cut. Help out the show and get some cool digitally delivered content. Sounds like a good deal to me.

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    Video Game Podcast for July 24th, 2006

    This week's podcast, The Geek, Frodo and Nevery talk about Comic Con, movie news and shameless advertising. Download it here (.mp3 37mb 54:07), or add us to your favorite podcasting program! Here are some notes:

    --Frodo

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