TEXAS HOLD EM THE MOST POPULAR GAME ON FACEBOOK
10 April 2009
11 million users can't be wrong!
The most popular application on the huge online social
networking website Facebook is Texas Hold 'em Poker,
which is played by a staggering 11 million of the site's
200 million users, according to a report over the
weekend in the Financial Times.
It's a staggering
number of people interested in online poker and a medium
to which marketing professionals men would be wise to
pay attention.
The trend is for Facebook to
emerge as the world's biggest gaming platform. Next in
popularity, with 9 million users is Pet Society , where
players create pets and their homes and exercise and
care for them with friends - it's even more popular in
terms of daily players with more than 60 percent of its
users returning every day to look after their creatures.
The newspaper reports that the leading publishers on
Facebook are San Francisco's Zynga and London-based
Playfish, which developed Pet Society.
Kristian
Segerstråle, chief executive of Playfish, says social
gaming is more like the social interactions around
kicking a ball in a park than the experience of a
traditional console video game.
"The emotional
driver for you to play is not the kind of fight or
flight emotions which tend to happen between you and the
screen on consoles, but the much more powerful emotions
of you and your real world friends," Segerstråle says.
"It can be competition, cooperation, expression,
communication, just like in real world games."
Social gaming was a hot topic at last month's Game
Developers Conference in San Francisco.
"The
biggest shift is that, in the past, most of the social
gaming has been with people that you don't know. With
Facebook that's completely changed," says Brian Fargo, a
game developer.
He describes a bowling game on
Facebook where he can see his friends and their high
scores.
"I want to play now because I want to
beat them. The social dynamic of knowing the people out
there really changes things for me," Fargo says.
Online gaming on services such as Microsoft's Xbox Live,
which has 17 million members worldwide, or PC casual
gaming destinations such as Pogo or Big Fish generally
takes place between strangers.
Facebook is not
charging developers for games, mainly because they are
initially free and the service is focused on expanding
its user base, the Financial Times reports.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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