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WB Using Game Reviews To Calculate Royalties

Thanks to The Hollywood Reporter for its article discussing Warner Bros. Interactive's decision to use average review scores in calculating the royalty rates videogame makers must pay to WB. The article explains: "Games based on Warner Bros. licenses must achieve at least a 70% rating [calculated via GameRankings.com and similar services], or incur an increase in royalty rates", with WB's Jason Hall commenting: "An escalating royalty rate kicks in to help compensate us for the brand damage... the further away from 70% it gets, the more expensive the royalty rate becomes... If the publisher delivers on what they promised -- to produce a great game -- it's not even an issue." However, Bruno Bonnell, CEO of Atari, makers of Enter The Matrix, which didn't include this contract clause, comments: "We sold four million copies. That's $250 million worldwide... and Warner Bros. would penalize us because we didn't achieve 70%? Are they joking?"

1 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Hypocrites by illuminata · · Score: -1, Troll

    This whole idea sounds kind of funny considering that they probably run some of the worst programming on television.

    Mind you, their shows probably don't do all that great in the Nielsen's, but what if their major advertisers wanted to implement some sort of positive review policy before shelling out the bucks?

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