Oberon Media is launching its Blaze platform today to allow casual game publishers to spread their social games to any platform. The aim is to make it easy to publish a game anywhere and thereby dissolve the barrier between games on Facebook and games on casual web sites or phones.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":199737,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,games,","session":"B"}']Within a couple of days, developers will be able to adapt their games to the Blaze platform and then publish it on a variety of Oberon’s distribution sites, which reach 50 million monthly active users across 150 game web sites. Ofer Leidner, chief strategy officer at New York-based Oberon, said partners such as AT&T are already using the Blaze platform; in the case of AT&T, it is launching Oberon-distributed games on its own web site, dubbed AT&T Games.
Oberon is one of many casual game companies that grew up in the pre-Facebook era and are now busy adapting to life after Facebook. Earlier this year, it launched its own social features for its casual games.
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For social game developers, it could mean that they will be able to reach a much larger audience beyond Facebook, but still enjoy the benefits on Facebook, which include having games spread in a viral fashion. The Blaze software development kit lets developers publish games quickly across platforms. Developers and publishers can use the platform as the ultimate diversification tool, allowing them to enter new markets without much effort.
“It’s a game-changing platform,” Leidner said. “It tears down the wall between social and casual games. Our partners
Players can share or recommend games, send additional free-trial time as a gift to their friends, become fans of a game, earn achievements, challenge friends and see what their friends are playing. Oberon can also facilitate multi-platform cross promotions to encourage players to try the latest and most popular games.
Besides AT&T, social game developer partners include Playdom, Evermore Media, Playrix, MetroGames, Backstage, Gogii, Slingo, i-Jet Media, and Nimbus Games. Further deals with top social game developers will be announced in the coming weeks. Partners rolling out the Blaze platform across web sits include MSN UK, Orange France and others. Rivals include other social game platform companies such as Heyzap, Sibblingz and Real Networks’ GameHouse division.
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