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News Trademarks Video Games

Predictions on the next Facebook game title by Zynga

facebook games

With Zynga’s latest Facebook game Cityville topping the charts as the most popular Facebook game in 2010, I thought I’d offer up a few predictions on Zynga’s next blockbuster game title in 2011.  With Cityville, Farmville, and Frontierville numbering daily users in the millions, one can only guess what’s next for Zynga, like another game with “ville” in the title.

Back in late 2009, the game publisher went on a trademarking spree as pointed out by Games.com.  

Libe Goad, wrote: “Zynga, the social game publisher responsible for FarmVille, PetVille, Mafia Wars and more, went on a trademarking spree during the month of December, securing 21 names for potential new games. Of course, many of the names follow the end with ‘ville,’ including TreasureVille, FrontierVille, CrimeVille and AnimalVille.”

The complete list of trademarks (which can viewed easily over at Trademarkia) included: Pet Hospital, Poker Blitz, Safari World, Treasureville, Zoo city, zoo island, mafia world, hotelville, hotel world, hospital world, hospitalville, frontierville, frontier world, frontier, crimeville, crime world, casino world, casino blitz, bountyville, animal world and animalville.

While FrontierVille ended up as one of the top Facebook games, it wasn’t until June 23, 2010, that the company purchased the domain name Cityville.com for $38,225 at Moniker – in what would turn out to be the single biggest game ever on Facebook.

The game title Cityville, has spawned hundreds of domain registrations and websites with “cityville” in the name, ranging from CityvilleGuide.com to CityvilleGamecheats.net.

Zynga is known for using a myriad of companies and individuals for registering domain names, so predicting the next big game title might prove to be much harder.  For example, the company used IP Cybercrime LLC to register its Cityville.com domain

Predictions

What are your predictions for Zygna game titles in 2011? 

Will the game developer go with a “ville” name? A “world” name?

Is the company somehow behind the recent buys of Songville.com, Dreamville.com, or Slotsville.com on Sedo? Or maybe RestaurantWorld.com (which was purchased for nearly $8,000 in September)?

The company has plenty of names to choose from, but who owns those names is the question.  As I wrote about before, though Zynga might use a certain title for a game, it doesn’t always own the domain (even after launching the game).

Petville.com was launched in 2009 by Zynga, and the company acquired the domain name Petville.com from its previous owners for an undisclosed amount.  Visit Petville.com, and a message at the top of the site reads: ‘the content that was previously found at petville.com can now be found at ipawz.com’. 

Though Zynga owns Petville.com, Farmville.com and other ville domain names, it doesn’t own Fishville.com – which saw a spike in traffic according to Compete when the site launched in November 2009.   It appears Zynga and the owners of Fishville.com couldn’t come to an agreement, but Zynga is doing just fine – its Fishville game owns nearly all the top spots on Google, and the company does own the .net which it uses for the game’s home page.

Why Cityville is so hot

If you’re wondering what Zynga is doing to make its’ games so popular, Gamasutra the online gaming magazine, has an interesting write up titled: How Zynga’s CityVille Has Compelled 70 Million Players.

If you still haven’t checked out Cityville yet, here’s some gameplay footage provided by IGN.

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News Video Games

CookingGames.com makes a splash in its short time online, outpacing other Hallpass Media properties in traffic

cooking games

Cookinggames.com is outpacing other Hallpass Media entertainment properties in visitor traffic according to the latest Compete rankings.

When the domain name CookingGames.com sold in January 2010 for $350,000 through NoktaDomains, casual gaming was suddenly the talk of the town, with many domain investors clamoring over the price in the blogs and forums.  The online comments ranged from disbelief to shock.

Bill Kara, the President of Hallpass Media, even wrote a guest post on Larry Fischer’s blog over at DirectNavigation.com titled: Amazing Guest Post by The Purchaser of CookingGames.com – A Must Read

Bill started the story with the following statement: “If you think Hallpass Media paid alot for cookinggames.com (350k) then you might be surprised at what we paid for stickgames.com…”

How has 2010 been for CookingGames.com?

Well, according to a rough estimate by Compete, the site that launched just over six months ago has experienced a +3,993.05% change in yearly traffic, with nearly 400,000 unique visitors per month (395,348 to be exact, as  of Nov. ’10).

Hallpass Media Traffic

For those of you that still haven’t seen what the Cooking Games web site is all about, you can better appreciate the site’s draw by visiting the Most Popular Games section and as the site says, bake a delicious treat for a birthday, wedding, anniversary, special occasion or just whenever.

Categories
News Video Games

New site launched on MilitaryGamer.com – building out domains as blogs certainly takes time to do

military video games

Now that I’ve had time in 2010 to re-think my strategy on domain names I’ve acquired over the last few years, I’ve decided to take a handful of domain names that I own and launch a blog. 

MilitaryGamer.com, which has only been online a few weeks, is a lot easier to keep up since I’m a big fan of military first person shooter games like Call of Duty.  As most of my readers know, I like to invest in military-oriented names like ArmyVehicles.com and MilitaryTrivia.com.  With MilitaryGamer, the idea behind the blog is to provide articles on military video games, cheats, walkthroughs, trailers and reviews – the things avid gamers are searching on.

I’m not a developer.

I like blogging, so putting up a web site online about something I enjoy is a no brainer that is a lot easier to maintain, but certainly still takes time to do. 

MilitaryGamer.com Domain Background

The domain name MilitaryGamer.com used to be a fully developed website devoted to the gaming community as far as back as 2003 according to the WayBack Machine (which explains a lot of the backlinks established). 

I picked up the name on NameJet a year ago for $69 after it had expired, about the same time I picked up other $69 names like Videogamejunkies.com which also had expired.

Even though you may not be too familiar with the military gaming community, it’s a popular niche.  From the perspective of a webmaster, there is a lot of demand to have a site dedicated to military video games.

MilitaryGamer.net is registered.  MilitaryGamers.com is a growing community of prior and current U.S. military service members who share a common interest in gaming.  There is even  a newly formed gaming news resource site on TheMilitaryGamer.com.

Building out on WordPress

Of course, you might be wondering what MilitaryGamer.com is built on. 

MilitaryGamer is built on arguably the best platform for non-developers – WordPress.  The site uses the very same premium WordPress theme here on Fusible – WP-Prosper by Solostream.  The theme bills itself as: “a clean, professional WordPress theme suitable for a a business website, blog or online magazine.”  Though every blogger has a reason for the theme they use, WP-Prosper comes chock full of features:

WordPress 3.0+ Compatible (Including Menu Management)
Clean, Two-Column Layout with Widgetized Sidebar
Optional Footer Widgets
Theme Settings Page for Easy Customization
Quick and Easy Custom Logo Integration
Two Different Featured Content Gliders (Wide and Narrow)
Multiple Home Page Layouts
Threaded Comments
Gravatar Integration
Easy Banner Ad Integration
Post Thumbnails
Drop-Down Navigation (WP 3.0 Ready)
SEO Optimized
Simple Social Networking Integration
Built-In Subscription Widget and YouTube Videos Widget
Multiple Page Templates
Built-In Author Page

And of course, the theme is full of great features, but it’s the free plug ins that make a difference.  Some of the plug-ins used on MilitaryGamer include the All In One SEO Pack, Echo, Fast Secure Contact Form, Get The Image, Like, MobilePress, Most Popular Tags, WP Tweet Button and Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

You’ll probably notice the look and feel of the MilitaryGamer logo. 

Military Gamer

The logo was designed for free online using CoolText.com.  Since this is a test project, there’s no incentive to spend a bunch of money.  Aside from the time spent setting up the site, the cost has been kept low, with the biggest cost being the purchase of the theme which I use across other blogs like Tweetups.com, then the domain name for $69. 

Traffic

Though it’s only been a few weeks since first expanding the domain name into a full blog, the site is already up to a couple hundred unique visitors per day with no search engine marketing or paid advertising.  A couple hundred visitors is not much at all, but it’s quickly growing.  A big help has certainly been the use of images in posts which have quickly been indexed by Google’s Image Search within a week of being online. 

Google Image Search

The web site is already ranking well in the search engines for phrases like “Military Video Games” and “Military Games”, and since there has been a steady uptick in traffic from a few readers per day to over 200 in just a few weeks, MilitaryGamer.com is a website we plan to keep online.   

Categories
News Video Games

Cityville at 6MM daily users in 8 days: It’s the kind of thing that makes some domain sellers kick themselves

cityville

You may remember the story I wrote back in November about Zynga ready to break ground with its biggest social game yet: Cityville

Well, today TechCrunch is reporting that Cityville, Zynga’s newest game is already at 6,000,000 daily users in just 8 days.

In early November when I wrote about Ville-domains, Cityville.com was parked.   The domain name had been purchased at Moniker in June for $38,225.

Less than a week later after the story ran, Zynga revealed it had plans for another Facebook game and an “Under Construction” page went online. 

Now, just 8 days into its launch, the domain name Cityville.com which now re-directs to its application page on Facebook, is the fastest-growing game in Zynga’s history.

 Do domain name sellers (like the seller of Cityville.com) kick themselves when they see this type of success?

Probably not, considering the seller got a $38,000 pay day for a name that probably only cost registration.  But you have to believe there is some level of regret, wondering if they had just held out a little longer what could’ve been.

In the last few weeks since my story on Ville domains ran, there have been a couple notable sales.

Dreamville.com sold at Sedo for $5,000 on Nov. 15 and SongVille.com sold for $550 a week later.

Neither name is registered to IP Cybercrime LLC, the company who is the registrant of Cityville.com.  IPCybercrime LLC’s slogan is “Your Guys for Undercover Buys”.

Categories
News Video Games

Guessing the next big domain trend? What’s hot in the gaming world

Avatar 3D video game

Keeping up with the hottest trends before they become too hot is something many domain investors like to do, because it gives them the opportunity to buy low, and sell high. 

While it’s impossible to keep on top of all the emerging trends in different industries, here’s one industry that is currently in the midst of a lot of changes and has a huge market:  gaming.

Gamasutra’s Best Of 2010: Top 5 Major Industry Trends

Gamasutra, the popular online gaming magazine that was the first to break the news that Activision may be taking its Call of Duty franchise into future warfare for it next title, has published their Top 5 trends in the gaming industry.

Runnerups in 2010 include Facebook gaming, 3D stereoscopic gaming, cloud gaming, digital, and this year’s hottest trend in gaming is next-generation motion controls like Microsoft’s controller-free Kinect.

For a rundown of what’s hot in the gaming industry and why see the story from Gamasutra.