Hardware Makers Woo Pro Gamers 14
Thanks to Wired News for their article discussing PC hardware makers, and their marketing efforts aimed at gamers. The piece suggests: "High-stakes video-game tournaments may be all the rage, but the real fights occur behind the scenes, where companies spend millions trying to get their technology directly into the hands of gamers." It goes on to point out the big competitive gaming deals: "Nvidia... ponied up $125,000 for QuakeCon, $30,000 for the Cyberathlete Professional League's Unreal Tournament competition and $350,000 for the winners of the Make Something Unreal game-design competition... AMD spent more than $300,000 on this year's QuakeCon." And the largest LAN parties are now greatly sought-after: "The closed bidding and increased competition has forced companies to pour more money into these tournaments or face losing coveted sponsorships."
Pricing (Score:1)
SuDZ
Hmmm... why don't they. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm... why don't they. (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm... why don't they. (Score:1)
Try telling that to Nintendo
does this really influence the hard core gamer? (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, the casual gamers really don't care as much about the high end hardware, nor are they really aware of computer gaming events or who the sponsors are.
maybe i'm wrong and people really are influenced by advertising. but it just seems that the people who are putting together their computers are savvy enough to know the benchmarks and will go with what is best...
Re:does this really influence the hard core gamer? (Score:2, Interesting)
FPS FPS $$$ (Score:2)
Almost every penny I have spent on my computer in the past 3 years was so I could get more frames per second...at a higher resolution, with a faster mouse, on a better monitor...etc. etc.
Of course, everything else benefits from the speed too..but that is just secondary. I mean...how many frames does the Internet get anyway?
ATI and Quakecon (Score:2)
Also it didn't hurt that they had the #1 GPU at the time and gave a me a free shirt =]
It's not the hardcore gamers (Score:4, Insightful)
It's the casual gamers who are the target -- they're less fixated on more performance, and thus easier to sway. A casual gamer is more likely to let other considerations affect the buying decision, such as, to name a Slashdot example, whether or not NVidia or ATI are currently doing good in the "supporting linux" department.
Drop in the bucket, marketing wise... (Score:2)