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WildTangent

 
Hoover's Profile: WildTangent, Inc.
Contact Information
WildTangent, Inc.
18578 NE 67th Ct., Redmond East Office Complex, Bldg. 5
Redmond, WA 98052
WA Tel. 425-497-4545
Fax 425-497-4501

Type: Private
On the web: http://www.wildtangent.com
Employees: 75

WildTangent knows that playing computer games doesn't necessarily have to be a wild tangent. The company develops online games that clients use to raise awareness of their products via placement in and around the games. Clients have include Toyota, Sony, Nike, and the Fox network. WildTangent also distributes its own games through its online gaming portal and messaging service, which reaches more than 20 million players worldwide. Its game service is pre-installed on PCs from companies such as HP, Dell, and Toshiba. The company also offers a premium advertising service that reaches gamers on popular MMOGs and game portals including Jagex's Runescape and Artix's AdventureQuest.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending June, 2008:
Sales: $8.9M

Officers:
CEO: Alex St. John
President and COO: Mike Peronto
CFO: Alan Dishlip

Competitors:
Activision Blizzard
Electronic Arts
Take-Two

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Wikipedia: WildTangent
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WildTangent
Type Private
Founded Washington (1998)
Headquarters 18578 NE 67th Court, Bldg. 5, Redmond, WA 98052
Industry Online/Video Games Developer/Publisher/Distributor
Products See the list or visit website
Website WildTangent.com

WildTangent is a game network, privately held in the United States that powers game services for several PC manufacturers including HP, Dell, Toshiba, Gateway and Lenovo. Collectively, WildTangent’s owned and operated service reaches over 20 million monthly gamers in the United States and Europe with a catalog of more than 800 games from nearly 100 developers.

The company also manages the advertising sales for a group of gaming properties including Mochi Media, Sony Online Entertainment's Free Realms, PopCap, PlayFirst, Jagex’s RuneScape and FunOrb properties, as well as Artix’s AdventureQuest, DragonFable and MechQuest properties.

The company owns a patent portfolio covering in-game advertising and game delivery technologies and operates CPM-based advertising campaigns for more than 50 US brands.

WildTangent monetizes online game play through a combination of digital retail purchase, subscription, advertising and micro-transactions using a proprietary micro-currency solution called WildCoins.

Contents

WildCoins

WildCoins are a micro-currency launched by WildTangent in the fall of 2006 to give gamers a way to pay for gameplay other than full retail purchase. WildCoins work like quarters used at a traditional arcade. Gamers can purchase WildCoins and use them to play any games on the network. Each time the gamer inserts the required number of coins, he or she can play the game for up to 24 hours, or until the user voluntarily exits the game, without having to use more WildCoins[1].

Advertisers can also purchase WildCoins and sponsor free game sessions. If the gamer agrees to see a short video advertisement while the game is loading, the advertiser will insert WildCoins making the game free to the player.

The WildCoins model allows customers to rent individual game titles, some of which can only be rented through the WildTangent catalog of nearly 1,000 games. Titles that are available for rent exclusively through the WildTangent console include Torchlight[2], Defense Grid, Raven Squad, World of Goo, Plants vs. Zombies, and Bejeweled.

WildClub

In November 2008, the company launched a subscription program called WildClub which offers customers access to the company’s patented digital currency, called WildCoins™. WildClub offers three tiers of membership: 2-month, 6-month and 12-month which vary in price from $9.99-$6.99. WildClub customers receive 50 WildCoins each month of their membership.

On October 24, 2009 WildTangent crossed the one million daily download threshold, less than one year after the launch of its popular WildClub program[3].

Games

WildTangent's catalog includes nearly 1,000 games from 3rd-party developers.

Approximately 30 of the games in the WildTangent catalog were produced by the company's own WildTangent Game Studios. The rest of the games on the WildTangent Game Network are from other game developers and publishers.

Originally, WildTangent produced advergames for various companies, including Nike, Coke, and Ford. The company no longer develops advergames. WildTangent used to be a publisher of Sandlot Games. But now, it's only the distributor due to the rebrand, new website and new corporating of Sandlot Games.

Criticism

Users have complained that the company's products have an adverse effect on their PC's performance or are intrusive to the user's experience.[4] PC Magazine wrote in 2004 that although the program was "not very" evil, some privacy complaints were justified as the program's user manual states that it may collect name, address, phone number, e-mail, and other contact information without the user's consent and could distribute the collected information with the user's consent. Concerns were also raised about the software's self-updating feature. [5] Some popular antispyware programs detect the program during their scans, such as Spybot which classifies it as a potentially unwanted program.[6][7] WildTangent asserts that the software bundle is safe, but many antispyware programs classify it as adware/spyware, mainly because it reports activity and machine specifications to WildTangent servers, in order to more finely tune games and services to casual gamers.

Some users complain that the WildTangent software is difficult to uninstall, [8] although the company packages an uninstaller with the program. To remove a WildTangent installation that was initiated by an end user, the user might be able to use the Add/Remove functionality in Windows or select third-party tools such as "RootkitRevealer". However, in cases where the OEM (such as HP) has installed the software on Windows 7, the software has been made intentionally difficult to uninstall by obfuscating files and preventing a complete uninstall from the Remove Programs applet.

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "WildTangent" Read more