This thread is very much directed at the Devs.. but what does everyone else think to this? (and apologies if it's been discussed before. I did search and didn't find)
It's weird! Everywhere else on the Internet, I'm doing my damndest to kill ads, avoid popups, and not click on click-thru banners. So why do I find myself, in the case of LFS, WISHING to see REAL ads from REAL companies around the track!?
I'd REALLY like to see, in LFS, sponsorship from real companies on the billboards around the track. I'd be delighted to see Vodaphone banners, Dunlop banners, Goodyear, Orange.. ANYthing, actually, that's real. I know there are companies out there who are introducing the concept of live banner advertising to game developers, and into online gameplay, and in the scenarios I've seen, I've found the idea largely unattractive. But LFS is entirely different, because the scenario begs for reality, and current and relevent, dynamically updated advertising IS a reality that I think is VERY achievable in LFS.
When we (my friends and I) set up our dedicated server to play LFS, one of the other games servers we installed was Battlefield2, and in the config is an option for "Server Graphic". In there, we dropped the URL for our own banner. KEWL! It would be nice to be able to advertise your LFS team on the pitwall, or on the wall facing you at turn 1, or on the bridge. At the moment, the only place you get to promote your server is in the list of multiplayer servers before folks pick and join one. It would be nice to get a bit more screen realty inside the game too!
The fundamental aspects of the mechanism exists already, in LFS, with dynamically updated car skins (kickass!!!).. and I see billboard advertising as a mere step away.
On top of everything else, it could guarantee the longevity of LFS beyond S3. While I do very much sense a philanthropic aspect to Scawen, Eric et al, and the business model of LFS and its supporting gaming community is most definitely a departure from traditional concepts, I do sometimes worry how long the servers that support LFS (Master Server, LFS Desktop etc) could coast in coming years.
It's a discussion that's getting coverage in the UK at the moment, with companies bidding for products' placement in TV programmes. I've been thinking about the thing since joining the LFS community this year. What do you guys think?
It's weird! Everywhere else on the Internet, I'm doing my damndest to kill ads, avoid popups, and not click on click-thru banners. So why do I find myself, in the case of LFS, WISHING to see REAL ads from REAL companies around the track!?
I'd REALLY like to see, in LFS, sponsorship from real companies on the billboards around the track. I'd be delighted to see Vodaphone banners, Dunlop banners, Goodyear, Orange.. ANYthing, actually, that's real. I know there are companies out there who are introducing the concept of live banner advertising to game developers, and into online gameplay, and in the scenarios I've seen, I've found the idea largely unattractive. But LFS is entirely different, because the scenario begs for reality, and current and relevent, dynamically updated advertising IS a reality that I think is VERY achievable in LFS.
When we (my friends and I) set up our dedicated server to play LFS, one of the other games servers we installed was Battlefield2, and in the config is an option for "Server Graphic". In there, we dropped the URL for our own banner. KEWL! It would be nice to be able to advertise your LFS team on the pitwall, or on the wall facing you at turn 1, or on the bridge. At the moment, the only place you get to promote your server is in the list of multiplayer servers before folks pick and join one. It would be nice to get a bit more screen realty inside the game too!
The fundamental aspects of the mechanism exists already, in LFS, with dynamically updated car skins (kickass!!!).. and I see billboard advertising as a mere step away.
On top of everything else, it could guarantee the longevity of LFS beyond S3. While I do very much sense a philanthropic aspect to Scawen, Eric et al, and the business model of LFS and its supporting gaming community is most definitely a departure from traditional concepts, I do sometimes worry how long the servers that support LFS (Master Server, LFS Desktop etc) could coast in coming years.
It's a discussion that's getting coverage in the UK at the moment, with companies bidding for products' placement in TV programmes. I've been thinking about the thing since joining the LFS community this year. What do you guys think?