Rumor over on Elliot’s Blog is that Zynga, the popular social game development company, purchased the domain name Rewardville.com, possibly for a rewards program that was announced back in late November in a Zynga Press Release.
Being a big fan of Zynga, I did a little digging on the name Rewardville.
While the domain name, which recently sold through Sedo for $4,500, is privately registered and redirects to rewards.zynga.com as Elliot Silver noted in his story, here’s what I did find out that no other technology site or blog has reported.
Zynga filed for Trademark in Europe for word: Rewardville
In mid-December, Zynga Inc. filed for a European trademark that went unnoticed.
The trademark application can be found here, by typing the term “rewardville” in the trademark name search field.
Though Zynga’s ultimate plans for Rewardville are not known at this time, chances are it’ll end up being an online resource and directory of rewards programs offered between Zynga and its partners.
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.
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.
A lot of writers are predicting hot trends for 2011 and one trend in particular that seems to stand out among many of the stories is “cloud computing”, a term that refers to accessing computer services over the internet or “cloud”. The terms internet and cloud are interchangeable.
Google Docs is a well known example of a cloud computing service.
While some critics say cloud computing is overhyped, it’s hard to argue against it with major service providers like Google and SalesForce.com taking to the cloud. Earlier this month, SalesForce.com unveiled Database.com, the enterprise cloud database.
Domain bloggers Andrew Allemann of Domain Name Wire and Mike Sullivan of Sully’s Blog have written about the Cloud.com domain. The domain Cloud.com was purchased earlier this year by VMOps after it was put up for sale by Meetup Co-founder Scott Hieferman.
Back in September, Peter Ulander, Chief Marketing Officer at Cloud.com (formerly VMOps) spent time answering Mike Sullivan’s questions on the domain and the business, which Mike posted online. According to Peter Ulander, the decision to acquire the name has been paying dividends with traffic: “While I can’t share the specific volume, we are pleased with the increase in traffic since launching under the cloud.com domain. Our core traffic increased by more that 500% and, when compared to similar companies in our space, we are outperforming them on inbound traffic and time spent on site – meaning that we are hitting the decision makers in our space.”
Will Cloud domains be a hot trend in 2011?
Though the price of Cloud.com remains undisclosed, there were dozens of domain sales in 2010, with many looking to be bargain buys. It will be interesting to see whether any of these names end up selling for a bigger return in 2011.
Domain
Date Sold
Price
Location
cloud-computing.de
Aug 4,2010
$38,280.00
Sedo
cloud-computing.de
Sep 11,2010
29000
Sedo.com
cloud.me
Sep 11,2010
$22,500.00
Sedo.com
cloudcomputing.com.au
2010
$8,000.00
NetFleet.com.au
cloudcomputing.in
2010
$5,000.00
PvtSale
cloudbot.com
2010
$4,000.00
cloudcraze.com
2010
$4,000.00
cloudexchange.com
Sep 11,2010
$3,900.00
Sedo.com
cloudcomputing.info
Sep 13,2010
$3,500.00
Sedo.com
cloudbook.de
2010
$3,075.00
publicclouds.com
Sep 17,2010
$3,000.00
Sedo.com
clouddb.com
Sep 13,2010
$3,000.00
Sedo.com
cloudgames.com
Sep 11,2010
$3,000.00
Sedo.com
myclouds.com
Sep 11,2010
$3,000.00
Sedo.com
cloudtree.net
2010
$3,000.00
Sedo
cloudgames.net
Sep 15,2010
$2,500.00
Sedo.com
instantclouds.com
Sep 11,2010
$2,500.00
Sedo.com
cloud.ly
2010
$2,500.00
oncloud9.com
Sep 13,2010
$2,300.00
Sedo.com
cloudsaas.com
Sep 12,2010
$2,250.00
Sedo.com
becloud.com
Sep 13,2010
$2,000.00
Sedo.com
cloudbook.net
Sep 12,2010
$2,000.00
Sedo.com
cloudnine.org
Sep 11,2010
$1,883.00
Sedo.com
cloudblue.com
Sep 12,2010
$1,700.00
Sedo.com
cloud.be
Sep 14,2010
1500
Sedo.com
cloudgames.co.uk
Sep 11,2010
$1,500.00
Sedo.com
cloudside.com
Sep 11,2010
$1,200.00
Sedo.com
cloud365.com
Sep 21,2010
$1,000.00
Sedo.com
letscloud.com
Sep 11,2010
$1,000.00
Sedo.com
vclouds.com
Sep 24,2009
$1,000.00
Sedo.com
Do you own any cloud domains? The only “cloud” name I own is CloudShapes.com, which I purchased on NameJet back in June 2008 after it had expired.
After selling for $38,225 in June at Moniker, CityVille is now bigger than FarmVille, Mashable is reporting.
Referring to the latest statistics provided by Appdata, a site that tracks Facebook application metrics, Cityville surpassed Farmville and the Facebook game now has nearly 17 million daily users. On Dec. 11, Cityville which had been online less than 2 weeks, had 6 million users and it has continued to grow at a phenomenal pace.
The top 10 Facebook apps on the leaderboard according to Appdata are:
1. CityVille
2. FarmVille
3. Phrases
4. Texas HoldEm Poker
5. FrontierVille
6. Causes
7. Mafia Wars Game
8. Café World
9. Phrases (new)
10. My Year In Status
There were several reports in the domain world about the sale of the name Decide.com for $175,000, but what wasn’t reported was that the seller turned a profit of nearly $160,000 on the sale. Buying and selling domain names can generate some nice revenue, and Decide.com is just one great example.
It started back in 2005, when the domain name expired on 06/30/2005 and went into a state of pending renewal or deletion. The name then found its way to SnapNames, where it was reportedly purchased for $15,250 according to the Sales History tool provided by DomainTools.
AfternicDLS, the domain listing service, then reported the sale of Decide.com for $175,000 in its weekly Sales report for Dec 6 – Dec 12. The sales results looked pretty good for Afternic. It reported a number of five-figure sales including peddle.com for $30,000 and Bubbleshooter.com for $30,000.
As pointed out by Andrew Allemann of Domain Name Wire, a quick look at the Whois records shows that the operators of Price Yeti, are the new owners of the domain: decide.com.
If you’re not familiar with Price Yeti, it’s privately funded startup launched in 2009 that allowed you to track items across all online retail sites, then the site notified you when the price of an item drops.
In the last several months, PriceYeti has gone offline while the owners get ready to unveil something new (possibly using Decide.com?). Until the new site launches, you can take a look at the old site here.
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