Categories: Uncategorized

Zynga Buys OMGPOP For $200 Million

This week Zynga announced that it has purchased game developer OMGPOP for $200 million. OMGPOP is best known for their pictionary-esque hit, Draw Something, which to-date has been installed on mobile devices more than 37 million times. The deal will see OMGPOP’s team of 40 joining the Facebook developing giant. The company has run its entirely Flash-based multiplayer casual gaming website since 2006, where users can play an array of games including pool, solitaire, hangman, and even missile command. More recently the company has moved on to create Facebook and mobile titles. Its newest casual gaming hit works by giving users a selection of three different subjects to draw. Once completed the chosen topic is guessed based on the drawing by a friend or stranger asynchronously. The goal of the game is to build up the highest streak possible and to collect coins, which are awarded to both users for correct guesses. The popularity of the app has been explosive; the company estimates that there are about 2,000 drawings being created every second. The game even beat out Facebook’s previous most popular game, Zynga’s own Words with Friends, at a difference of over two million daily active users. Zynga had a rough start to the year, as they received a great deal of backlash over allegations of creating shameless clones of other popular games. The outcry began when three man game studio Nimblebit called out the company on reddit, stating that Zynga’s new game, Dream Heights, was far too similar to Tiny Tower to be a coincidence. Only a week later, developer Buffalo Studios called the casual gaming giant out for the doing the same thing to their game, Bingo Blitz. Both companies wrote an open letter to Zynga, full of suspicious comparison pictures and a pretty wicked overall sarcastic tone. Zynga has acquired game studios all across the world, and with another in its pocket it’s a shame to think about OMGPOP’s creative manpower potentially being wasted on emulating and renaming other already popular games. Or perhaps amongst all the backlash this year Zynga’s finally learned its lesson, and maybe that’s why it acquired OMGPOP in the first place, instead of just copying it.

Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Share
Published by
Techli

Recent Posts

Houston-based startup announces integration of orbital biomedical OS to advance biological discovery in low Earth orbit

Commercial space station developer Starlab Space announced this week that it has partnered with Helogen…

3 días ago

What the launch of Revenue OS by ADvendio signals for the future of agentic advertising

It won't come as a surprise that agentic AI holds tremendous promise for the advertising…

6 días ago

Billdr relaunches as new “OS” for construction back office, raises $3.2 million

Software company Billdr, which is building the AI-native operating system for construction, announced in late…

2 semanas ago

Ness appoints new CTO to ATONIS to bring intelligent engineering to enterprises

AI has long promised to unlock widespread operational efficiencies, automate workflows and generate key business…

2 semanas ago

Crescite Bets on Faith-Driven Finance With Catholic USD™, a New Kind of Stablecoin

Crescite Innovation Corporation is entering the stablecoin space with an approach that challenges the dominant…

4 semanas ago

AI maintenance startup Fracttal raises $35 million to scale predictive asset management

Fracttal, a leading company in AI-powered maintenance solutions, announced on Wednesday it has closed a…

1 mes ago