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As WP's managing editor, I edit review and preview articles, attempt to keep up with the frantic pace of Rainier's news posts, and keep our reviewers on deadline, which is akin to herding cats. When I have a moment to myself and don't have my nose in a book, I like to play action/RPG, adventure and platforming games.

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Microsoft to Make Massive Purchase

by Judy on April 26, 2006 @ 1:06 p.m. PDT

According to the Wall Street Journal, Microsoft plans to pay $200 million to $400 million for Massive, a company that places ads in video games. Although both parties declined to comment, this acquisition could lead to ads in Microsoft's Xbox Live service.

The deal to buy the two-year-old start-up highlights the increasing importance of advertising in nontraditional media, the report said. There are high expectations for in-game advertising, because it offers the promise to again connect advertisers with the desirable young male audience, which has been abandoning television and other traditional media in favor of the Internet and video games. Clients of Massive, which uses always-on Internet connections to place real-time ads in games, include Coca-Cola, Honda, and other advertisers that are boosting spending for ads in video games. Massive's advertising partners include game publishers THQ, Vivendi Universal's games unit, Take-Two Interactive Software's 2K Sports, NCsoft and Konami.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said the story is based on rumor and declined comment. A spokeswoman for Massive also declined comment. In an interview with Reuters in December, Massive Chief Executive Mitchell Davis said forecasts from a variety of industry sources call for real-time game advertising revenue to grow into a $3 billion-plus global market by 2010.

The new generation of in-game ads offered by Massive and rivals like Double Fusion allow advertisers to run campaigns for specific periods of time, rather than buying a slot that is hard-coded into a game. That means billboards and storefronts in games can change over time to more closely resemble the real world that some games attempt to recreate.

Video game publishers, which are struggling with rising game development costs, hope that in-game advertising will come to represent a meaningful source of revenue. Microsoft, which already runs a large advertising business around its MSN Internet unit, has won over gamers with its Xbox Live service that connects gamers to the Web through its Xbox and newer Xbox 360 consoles.

In an effort to close the gap on online advertising leaders Google and Yahoo, Microsoft plans to roll out a new advertising system called adCenter that sells ads across the company's Web content and services. In the future, advertisers will be able to place ads through adCenter across Microsoft's other platforms such as Xbox consoles and mobile devices.

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