Massive Incorporated

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Massive Incorporated

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Contact Information
Massive Incorporated
627 Broadway, 7th Fl.
New York, NY 10012
NY Tel. 646-778-3500

Type: Subsidiary
On the web: http://www.massiveincorporated.com

Massive wants to help the videogame industry make in-game advertising big. Working in conjunction with about 40 game publishing partners, the company offers an advertising network that targets males 13-34 years old by placing ads within videogames. The ads are served into the games rather than being hard-coded in, providing a dynamic rather than static advertising experience and allowing the company to gather data on user interaction. Massive also conducts research with gamers in order to determine the most optimal locations for ad placement. Games in the Massive network have included Transformers: The Game, Anarchy Online, and The Matrix Online. The company is owned by software goliath Microsoft.

Officers:
CEO: JJ Richards
COO: Eric Bassman
CTO: David J. Sturman

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Massive Incorporated

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Massive Incorporated
Type Subsidiary of Microsoft
Industry Advertising
Founded 2002
Headquarters New York City, New York, United States
Key people Mitch Davis
(Founder and C.E.O)
Brian Elieson
(Director Products and Partners)
Products In-game advertising
Owner(s) Microsoft
Parent Microsoft Game Studios
Website massiveincorporated.com

Massive Incorporated is an advertising company that provides software and services to dynamically host advertisements within video games. Massive Incorporated was purchased by Microsoft in May 2006 for approximately $200 million to $400 million.[1][2]

The company is set to close by the end of 2010.[3]

Contents

Service

The service, collectively known as The Massive Network, allows game developers to place advertisements within video games by providing a software development kit (SDK) and servers to host advertisements to be streamed to clients when the game is played. The streaming of advertisements allows old advertisements to be removed and more contextual ones applied in their place. Where games such as Need For Speed: Most Wanted had static advertisements for Cingular and Burger King[4], advertisements supplied by a streaming network allow more temporary ads such as movie or TV show posters. Both the publisher and Massive can then continue to make money after the game has been sold.

The software is made so as to capture the proper demographic: it would be a problem to advertise an R-rated movie in an G-rated game or to place advertisements that conflict with a game's genre.

First, placement and layout of the advertisements is planned by the developers with help from Massive. Advertisements can be any texture, but to maintain realism, advertisements are generally placed on objects such as posters, billboards, storefronts, and other likely media. Massive calls this "Phase I: Design of the Inventory Elements."

Second, the SDK is integrated with the game to act as a client to Massive's ad servers. It allows the game to fetch the ad, display it on a surface, and analyze how the player acts around it. Massive refers to this as "Phase II: Integration of the Software Development Kit (SDK)."

Third is self-explanatory, "Phase III: Testing & Support." These are the software testing and deployment steps.

See also

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External links


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