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In-game ads coming to Counterstrike; Valve becomes one with the Stygian abyss photo

Almost a year ago the internet was abuzz (like a swarm of hungry electronic bees) about the Subway ads that had infiltrated PC shooter piece de resistance, Counterstrike. Valve, creators of Halflife and hangers-on of Counterstrike, took swift, public action in complaining like a young girl with a skinned knee, and the ads went away.

Until now. *cue dramatic orchestral swell*

In a recent interview with Valve's Doug Lombardi, CS-Nation came to find out that Valve and IGA have reached an agreement to slip their own ads into your gamespace. These ads are going to start popping up in servers around the virtual world early next year. The ads will not be optional, you will never be able to un-see them and Valve's soul is now forfeit to the Old Gods of Commerce (Cthulhu Moneypenny, and Pazuzu Bagocash).

While Monsignore Lombardi goes on to say that he believes the ads will provide a new avenue through which mod makers can make cash (after all, the original Counterstrike was created by two nerds with far too much free time and a vague idea that a woman's vagina might look like Admiral Ackbar), you can imagine that Valve is getting a little moist over the increased revenue that bombarding the largest audience of online gamers in the history of mankind might bring them.

I know that some of you are going to accuse me of rampant communism and you may even turn me over to the long dead corpse of Joe McCarthy, but I hate this idea. Counterstrike was the ultimate example of the Internet's power to promote free expression and community among people all over the world and by cashing in on it, Valve has just kicked the metaphorical puppy of it's own fans' trust.

(Editor's Note: Possible alternate titles for this article include: "Counterstrike Ads Part 2: The Revengening!" and "Seriously, this was just an excuse to post a picture of Cthulhu". -- Nex) 


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6 comments | showing # 1 to 6

Niero's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 01:38
Niero
Ladies and gentlemen, may I present Florian 2.0
Chris Taran's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 01:45
Chris Taran
Oh, how I miss Florian...

Nex isn't half bad himself though. However, in order to truly follow in Florians foot steps, he's got to start using random/whacky tags that end up being just as off the wall and funny as the article itself.
Dexter345's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 01:49
Dexter345
While I agree, this is pretty awful, I think it'd be sweet if they actually incorporated more than just a "hey look at this ad" kind of way. Like if the terrorists had to try to blow up a McDonald's as a statement against gluttonous Americans, or if the counter-terrorists had to save hostages trapped in a Starbucks. It could work!
jkgohan's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 01:53
jkgohan
From the LITTLE BIT i read, my opinion is that in BF2142 which the reason why im playing Demo right now is that i heard it installed spyware to see what sites you go to so it could determine ingame adds...well those ad's arnt really that noticible atleast in BF2142. So i really dont mind them anymore.
Aetsen's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 03:38
Aetsen
ID HIT IT.

Milofo's Avatar - Comment posted on 12/10/2006 04:36
Milofo
It would make some sense to have some realistic advertizements but the way they are done is not right. For example, you can have a modern day warfare game taking place in an urban setting with Mcdonald ads around. However, they should not be the only advertizements, since Mcdonalds is not the only company in the world last time I checked, and the advertizements shold not me all pretty and unnatural to look at. If there was really fighting going on, the poster on the wall would not be in perfect shape and brighter then everything else around it. You won't get worn out or realistic looking advertizements because the companies want to get your attention and not "risk" making their ads look bad. Unless companies try and make their ads seem more realistic for the setting instead of just wall jpgs, I think ads are still a bad idea.
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