According to The Wall Street Journal, the company has had discussions about how to make money from its games for months now, including in-app purchases, putting a price tag on more premium titles and placing ads on games that subscribers to its ad tier have access to. These methods are common (and effective) in the mobile gaming world, with consumers expected to spend $111.4 billion on mobile games in 2024

The only reason Netflix games library is decent, its are not laid with ads or in-app purchases. If that was changed it would no longer make the experience enjoyable. Hopefully, they don’t.

  • This is truly absurd.

    Netflix basically bought the rights to republish versions of established mobile games as “Netflix Edition” titles with ads and in-app purchases removed as a value add to subscribers to get them into their games ecosystem. And now they want… to put ads and micro transactions back? I understand the reasoning behind it obviously-- they need a return on their investment-- but that is a clean about-face from their initial strategy

  • @Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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    201 year ago

    I think Netflix Games is stupid.

    I have a Netflix account.

    But to download a Google play game then to be told to log into my Netflix account or else uninstall? That’s stupid.

  • @qwertyqwertyqwerty@lemmy.one
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    151 year ago

    So they are going to put ads and in-app purchases inside of a paid streaming app that also has ads? Games as part of Netflix only made sense if they were part of a value-add. Having the games individually having monetization completely invalidates paying for Netflix (aside from video).

    This is a dumb idea, and Netflix knows it. Sounds like an intentional plan to kill off their game segment.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 🏆
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    1 year ago

    If the ads fit in-world, like a Coke bilboard in a racing game or as is used in many games now the real product names of guns: I’m fine with that.

    If it’s a fuckin’ popup or splash page or something that isn’t actually part of the game itself, all subtle like: Fuck that.

    Given the mainstream popularity of video games, it makes a lot of sense to get sponsorships to place real world products in the game, the way it’s done on TV and movies. Subtle. Not all up in your face like Wayne’s World (at least that was a joke) or Death Stranding.

  • m-p{3}
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    81 year ago

    Capitalism, yet ruining another platform by trying to squeeze more money out of existing subscribers. It’s never enough.

  • @SomeGuy69@lemmy.world
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    81 year ago

    Into the breach is a good Netflix game. I found an APK online, it even works without my Netflix account, which is nice.

  • Pika
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    31 year ago

    Didn’t they just post about how they acknowledge that their game ecosystem sucks is almost nobody uses it but they intend to change that… now they want to add Advertisements? 10/10 company planning