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News

Calvin Ayre gives interview to Gaming Intelligence, discusses Slots.com domain

Calvin Ayre

Calvin Ayre gave an interview to Gaming Intelligence, a site that provides coverage and analysis of the gaming industry. 

The acquisition and development of Slots.com was one of the topics of the discussion.

A brand new brand

But all that’s for the future. It’s Bodog Europe that is currently receiving a huge injection of cash (presumably from Ayre). Ayre bought the Slots.com domain name while sitting at a bar in London’s Soho district. It’s his first attempt to woo a non-Bodog crowd.

The official target audience for Slots is “gender-neutral”, which is perhaps the only politically correct phrase that Ayre has uttered in his life. The pink branding suggests that really means girls but that branding may change after the site is fully operational.

To read the interview on Gaming Intelligence, you must be a paying premium member.  

There’s good news though: you can read the full transcript of the article in its entirety over CalvinAyre.com.

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News

Twitter domain names and websites see strong sales on Flippa

increase my followers

Flippa, a marketplace for selling websites and domain names, is helping owners of Twitter-related domain names and websites see strong sales.  Flippa sellers have access to a huge crowd of buyers.  In October 2010, traffic to Flippa was nearly 250,000 unique visitors according to Compete

For sellers looking to be quickly rewarded for registering a Twitter domain or established web site, the figures are strong – especially compared to other recently ended sales reported by Flippa.

The sales today include:

Thetweetmaster.com won for $80
Twitterfollowersnow.net won for $100
Increasemyfollowers.com won for $1,750
Twitterfollowing.info won for $100

In March 2010, Flippa was credited with selling Retweet.com at public auction for $250,000 – it’s biggest sale since the site launched in 2009.  The company even published a case study about the sale entitled:  How Retweet.com was built then sold for $250K.

Tell us about the Retweet website sale.
We’ve only sold Retweet.com through Flippa. We originally planned to sell the website through a private broker, but later decided a competitive public auction was our best route for this domain.

We acquired (purchased) the domain during the explosion in the popularity of the Twitter.com platform.

Mesiab Labs had been building marketing software for Twitter for nearly 6 months when we saw the growing market demand for real time news and how Twitter was an essential tool in making this possible ( Hudson plane crash ).  Now since news spreads through Twitter by users retweet’ing stories, we figured retweet.com was the most appropriate name for such a service.

After the domain name was acquired we spent the next couple of months building it up as a side project. We worked with crowd-sourced designers (ed: 99designs.com ) and a few highly-skilled outsourced programmers to help complete the project while we focused on our ( Mesiab Labs ) bottom line.

The website began to grow organically after online blogs and other press announced the release of Retweet.com, the popular name created much buzz around the web ( positive and negative ).

What inspired you to sell Retweet?
The website eventually got to a point where we realized it obviously shouldn’t be a side project ( rather someone’s main focus ).  Since our expertise is in marketing software platforms, we felt that we had taken retweet.com as far as we could. This combined with our new focus on our latest startup company Jounce, Inc., we decided to sell.

The full case study can be read online at Flippa.

You can expect the Twitter sales to continue as Twitter continues to grow in numbers.

A few Twitter facts (updated September 14, 2010 on Twitter’s web site)
Twitter has 175 million registered users.
95M tweets are written per day.

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News Trademarks

Experian purchases Checkmyride.com from Sedo GreatDomains for $17,000 (read why)

car show

Experian Information Solutions has purchased the domain name Checkmyride.com for $17,000 via Sedo’s GreatDomains.

The company better known for its credit reports, scores, and checks filed for a trademark on “Check My Ride” on October 26, 2010 according to the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

Though the domain name currently doesn’t resolve, it appears the company has plans for launching an online community that allows users to chat about vehicles and the personal histories of their vehicles.

According to the USPTO:  ‘IC 042. US 100 101. G & S: computer services, namely, providing an on-line community for users to participate in and initiate discussions and engage in social networking regarding vehicles and personal histories relating to vehicles’

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News Video Games

German gaming portal Bigpoint acquires Ruined.com for $7,800 for its post apocalyptic third person shooter

ruined online

Bigpoint, one the largest German gaming portals and one of the top 3 gaming portals worldwide, has acquired Ruined.com from Sedo GreatDomains for its post apocalyptic third person shooter called ‘Ruined’.

Bigpoint originally used the domain name Ruinedonline.com for its site which debuted in October.

According to an article in Gamasutra: ‘Hamburg, Germany-based Bigpoint said that it’s adding 250,000 new registrations every day, and with the pending official launches of Battlestar Galactica and the company’s first U.S.-developed game Ruined Online, Bigpoint expects growth to continue.’

As of late October, the company claims to have over 150 million registered members of its browser-based games.

Bigpoint owns nearly 1,000 domain names for over 65 online games bundled on its game portal.

The company issued a press release about the launch of Ruined in early October:

Bigpoint Inc., the US-based subsidiary of Bigpoint GmbH (www.bigpoint.com) – a worldwide leader in online gaming – today unveiled its first browser game developed in North America. Set in a post-apocalyptic San Francisco, Ruined (www.ruinedonline.com) is a fast-paced, arena-style combat game that includes high-end features common to traditional console games.

“We came to the United States to extend and optimize our existing portfolio of games and to create new titles specifically for this market,” said Heiko Hubertz, CEO and Founder, Bigpoint. “With Ruined, we believe we’ve taken a huge step forward in producing a game that looks and feels like something you get with console and PC games, but requires nothing more than a browser to play.”

While still in early development, Bigpoint is showing-off a playable demo at the Game Developers Conference Online in Austin, Texas this week. In its current form, the game includes two arenas based on well-known San Francisco landmarks. Players can select one of three characters and engage in a deathmatch against other live players.

In developing Ruined – which is being built atop the Unity 3 engine – Bigpoint has partnered with dSonic Inc., an award-winning audio production company, and Cinematico Inc., a full service 3D design, animation, and motion capture studio. Bigpoint selected these firms to achieve a high-caliber experience for hardcore gamers.

Bigpoint is targeting this winter to release an open beta of the game. At that time, three more characters, additional San Francisco-inspired arenas, and multiple game modes will be available. In addition, the game will include 3D positional and stereo sound, including voice chat.

For more information about Ruined, including character back-stories and 3D scenes from the game, and to sign-up for the game newsletter, please visit: www.ruinedonline.com.

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News

PatentAttorney.com sells for $40,000 at Sedo’s GreatDomains

uspto

The domain name PatentAttorney.com has reportedly sold at Sedo GreatDomains for $40,000. 

It appears the previous owner was Patent Attorney, Louis J. Brunoforte, Esq, a lawyer in Tampa, Florida.  Louis runs his own personal web site at http://www.brunofortelaw.com

It also appears Louis owns the plural of the domain: patentattorneys.com, which currently re-directs  to patentattorney.com.  Patentattorneys.com did not change hands according to registrant records.

According to Archive.org’s WayBack Machine, Louis invested early on in both of these domain names going back to the nineties, and had a web site online for patentattorney.com, while patentattorneys.com has re-directed for over 10 years.

Though $40,000 sounds like a good return, Valuate.com a site that provides free online appraisal calculations, appraises the name at nearly $100,000 ($90K to be exact).  PatentAttorneys.com appraises for only $37,000.

However, there’s no price that can be put on the amount of business the domain name generated for Louis’ practice over the last 10 years.