this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2024
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iirc they actually started adding these as mini games after getting sued for false advertising
My wife got caught in a mobile ad game. After a thousand of them she finally said, "I'm bored why not" and got addicted for a few weeks.
When I saw the ad of the game she was playing, I was mocking her like, "Oh is that in the game?" And she showed me. Yeah, it totally is. Usually as a special event, or some "mini game" inside the game.
Well damn guess I was wrong.
I don't remember having seen any actually successful lawsuits about this. There have been a few about the fake sale price thing etc, but I haven't seen anything about these ads for games that don't exist. Happy to admit I'm wrong if anyone has any proof, but as far as I'm aware, that's never happened.
These games do end up adding mini games of the advertised game, but that's not because they're trying to cover their ass. It's because the ads are for games they're considering making, and if the ads do well, they know people will click to the store page. The next step is to build it as a mini game inside another game to get more data on engagement with the actual gameplay mechanics to see if people would actually play and keep playing the game. It's much cheaper and more efficient to do that as a smaller part inside an existing game instead of building a whole new stand alone game. If they mini game does well, they may move it standalone, but if not, it may just stay as a part of the larger one depending on how much it costs to maintain there.