Online gaming is more popular in the US than visiting video sharing and social networking sites, according to a new report by Park Associates.
While developers and publishers look to sites such as YouTube, Facebook and MySpace as inspiration for community features in upcoming games, research shows that 34 per cent of US internet users play games online on a weekly basis, compared to 29 per cent who visit online video sites and 19 per cent interested in social networking.
"Despite the growing popularity of YouTube, MySpace, and Facebook, gaming remains the king of online entertainment, driven largely by casual gaming activities," commented James Kuai, analyst at Park Associates.
"Gaming also has business advantages. Unlike sites for social networking and video streaming, which rely solely on advertising revenue, casual gaming has more mature and heterogeneous revenue models, including web-based and in-game advertising, try-before-you-buy, subscriptions, and micro-transactions," detailed Kuai.
Year-on-year growth rates show that gaming has seen a 79 per cent rise in frequent online players, compared to 46 per cent using social networking sites.
But the biggest growth rate is for users of video sharing sites such as YouTube, which leapt by 123 per cent, according to Park Associates.
"The casual gaming industry cannot rest on its laurels," said Kuai.
"In order to counter the growing competition from other online activities, the industry needs to continue to grow its fan base and find ways to better monetize its existing audience."
source: gamesindustry
Related Stuff
-
MooV: Using cutting edge Video phones and Software Video Phones - coupling all that with VoIP and empowering the disabled.
-
Moo Telecom: VoIP communications made easy - Ring anyway with the fun and ease of using a normal phone
-
TagR:Mobile Social Network with Real Time Locations Based services, and Ambience Intelligence, VoiP, IM, Skype, Googletalk, Mapping, Flickr, Events, Calendaring, Scheduling, SecondLife Support
-
ClearSMS : ClearSMS is a Web-based application that lets you send bulk SMS messages to your customers, contacts, or just about anyone.
-
Jajah:jah is a VoIP (Voice over IP) provider, founded by Austrians Roman Scharf and Daniel Mattes in 2005[1]. The Jajah headquarters are located in Mountain View, CA, USA, and Luxembourg. Jajah maintains a development centre in Israel.
-
Skype: It’s free to download and free to call other people on Skype. Skype the number one voice over ip software
- PrivatePhone: a free local phone number with voicemail and messages you can check online or from any phone.

Original Source: