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Hellgate Beta's In-Game Ads Raise Eyebrows

ari wins writes "IGN.com has up a post discussing the new EA/Flagship game Hellgate: London, and the in-game advertisements it includes to facilitate targeted marketing. Though ads in games aren't exactly new, some Beta testers are objecting to their apparently off-putting presence. Users have also noted that accepting the game's EULA means you submit to the collection of 'technical and related information that identifies your computer, including without limitation your Internet Protocol address, operating system, application software and peripheral hardware'."

5 of 424 comments (clear)

  1. Marketing Has Succeeded by nurb432 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it has gotten to the point that ads are expected and feel 'right' in a video game, then the marketeers have won.

    ADs are not 'right' in any context, especially when you are paying for the product.

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    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Marketing Has Succeeded by derfy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wait a minute. Games are trying to imitate reality. In reality, subway stations have ads in them. So, shouldn't games have ads in them* to "feel right"?

      * = WHERE APPROPRIATE. Games like WoW do not need billboards in them.

      But I agree on the paying aspect. If you pay, you don't see ads(unless you want to).

      And, make the game cost less due to the ad revenue.

  2. Re:This CAN be stopped by Cheapy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...or you could just not buy it and send an e-mail explaining why.

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    Would you kindly mod me +1 insightful?
  3. Re:This CAN be stopped by semicolon_underscore · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...or you could just not buy it.

  4. Darwinian response to exploitation by customers by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I once even bought a game at Electronic's Boutique then when they wouldn't take it back, I took it back to Babbages and they were cool with it. So you're saying you bought a game from a company whose returns policy sucked, and rather than let them deal with it you let them keep the money and instead exploited the goodwill of a company with a more reasonable returns policy? (*)

    As far as I'm concerned, this nullifies any right you have to bitch about draconian returns policies or lousy customer service. It's this sort of behaviour that probably led to the killing off of more reasonable store return policies (if not the stores themselves) and encouraged- and justified- the proliferation of those that treat their customers like assholes.

    People like you are the reason that we're not living in that "dream world" any more. (**)

    God spoke to me. If I was God, I'd have called you an asshole.

    (*) Yeah, I'm waiting for a self-justifying whine along the lines of "they could re-sell it". Like it should be their problem to re-sell your secondhand crap in exchange for "returning" your money that they never received in the first place.
    (**) Pre-empt #2; Yes, everyone else was doing it too, and it wouldn't have made any difference what you did as an individual. Whatever.
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