This is ether the second or third round of layoffs at Zynga this year. I don't see them lasting more than a year or two at this rate.
I seriously doubt Facebook would allow them to do online gambling. Every state has a different law on whether or not it's acceptable and you'd be blocking out vast swaths of the US.Eh, I wouldn't put it that way yet. They need to shrink. They're a huge company considering their portfolio. More likely they will shrink until their company size makes more sense, and by then they'll have started offering online gambling services (in the US, they already have it in the UK).
I seriously doubt Facebook would allow them to do online gambling. Every state has a different law on whether or not it's acceptable and you'd be blocking out vast swaths of the US.
Licensed in Nevada only means that they can do it in Nevada, not run it from Nevada. It's illegal to run an online gambling site in the US and it's illegal to gamble online in the US. They have already started seizing assets related to this kind of thing. It's not going to happen.They don't need Facebook to do it. They're licensed for it in Nevada already, will probably licensed in NJ by the end of the year, it's mostly about getting it up and running and legally-approved. The nice thing about gambling is that it tends to focus on very specific areas in the US. Between Nevada and Atlantic City, that's a huge chunk of people they can offer their services to.
It's less about whether the market is there, and more about whether they can use their social apps to bring it to the casino operators who are also jumping on the online bandwagon with *a lot* more experience with actual gambling.
Yeah, all of my favorite real-money poker sites got shut down by the feds a year or two ago when that law went into place.Licensed in Nevada only means that they can do it in Nevada, not run it from Nevada. It's illegal to run an online gambling site in the US and it's illegal to gamble online in the US. They have already started seizing assets related to this kind of thing. It's not going to happen.
Only if by laughingstock you mean utterly criminal. They've been sued more than once and lost.Isn't Zynga pretty much a laughingstock among gamers for copying other people's games?
Well, yes, but I meant a lot of gamers don't take them seriously now. That can't be good for the promotion of their products, can it. How can a company survive when customers automatically associate them with an inferior product?Only if by laughingstock you mean utterly criminal. They've been sued more than once and lost.
"Gamers" aren't their target market. The people they're aiming at have no idea who makes the games they're playing, they just know it's what their friends are playing, or it's what's advertised in their Facebook feed.Well, yes, but I meant a lot of gamers don't take them seriously now. That can't be good for the promotion of their products, can it. How can a company survive when customers automatically associate them with an inferior product?
I've always said the world would be a better place if more people were gamers, and I'm proven right once again."Gamers" aren't their target market. The people they're aiming at have no idea who makes the games they're playing, they just know it's what their friends are playing, or it's what's advertised in their Facebook feed.
Yes, exactly. Nevada, where the entire damn country goes to gamble. Saying that they can only run an online gambling site in Nevada to people currently in Nevada is like saying you can only sell subway fares to people currently in NYC. It's not much of a limitation.Licensed in Nevada only means that they can do it in Nevada, not run it from Nevada.
That article is severely out of date. The DoJ re-adjusted their view of the Wire Act in 2011 (http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanv...t-of-justice-flip-flops-on-internet-gambling/), and since then 3 states have explicitly legalized a regulated form of gambling, mostly poker, and a bunch of others are discussing it.It's illegal to run an online gambling site in the US and it's illegal to gamble online in the US. They have already started seizing assets related to this kind of thing. It's not going to happen.
So The Last of Us is getting 10/10 rating across the board. Might have to buy it...
It is entirely possible, if you believe the New Coke Theory. But it's equally likely they thought getting a famous actor to do Snake's voice would give them more mainstream appeal, despite the fact that Metal Gear games already sell shitloads of copies. I doubt this is Hayter asking for too much money, because they didn't even approach him this time.Keifer Sutherland is playing Snake in the next Metal Gear Solid. I'm still sure this is all just an elaborate Kojima hoax.
But, Ubisoft replaced Michael Ironside with some new guy, who's to say Konami wouldn't.
Classy.Sooo.... breaking news from E3...