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Quiet Babylon


Some nice things about micropayments

Monday May 12, 2008 by Tim Maly

Raph Koster’s post today got me thinking (again) about Danc’s excellent 2005 article about the touring band as a business model.

The thing about the touring band and about micropayments that gets everyone excited is that there is NO UPPER LIMIT to how much a devoted fan can spend on you. I’m embarrassed when I think about how much money I have spent on pretend Magic cards and judging by the evidence over in Korea, a lot of other people are doing the same kind of thing for all sorts of games.

There is another benefit to micropayments that I haven’t seen people talk about as often: it’s much easier for players to slip in and out of fandom. When I broke my WOW addiction, I cancelled my account, cutting myself off from play. It’s unlikely that I’ll ever return. Meanwhile, on some server in California sits my neglected Magic: the Gathering Online collection. Any time I want, I can drop back in and play a few games with my old cards. How many casual games can I stand before I break down and start buying packs again? I’m scared to find out. Free-to-play micropayment models allow the kind of “oh hey I remember this band” nostalgia to take hold more easily, dragging recovered addicts back in to the fold.


 
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