Thursday, February 21, 2013

Multiplayer Mobile Gaming Network Nextpeer Adds 100K Users A Day As A Ninja Bike Race Takes Off

ninja-bikeIt can be a tough life out there for mobile-social gaming platforms. With Apple’s Game Center covering the bare basics and GREE’s recent shutdown of OpenFeint, it’s arguable that there isn’t that much room for another mobile gaming platform. Yet there are a few startups that are trying to do it by offering something differentiated. Nextpeer launched about a year and half ago as a way for independent game developers to add multi-player mode to mobile apps. While building these gaming platforms can be slow-going at first, a breakout game called A Bike Race of Ninja Temple is helping to add about 100,000 users per day to the Israeli?startup’s network. Muoyo Okome, a Microsoft business manager who moonlights as an indie game developer, used some open source code for games that resemble last year’s hit Tiny Wings. Tiny Wings is an indie hit out of Northern Germany and a physics game that has you press the screen to roll a bird off different hills. He then re-skinned it with a ninja-bike theme. He called the game A Bike Race of Ninja Temple. The difference between it and Tiny Wings though is that you can’t play it in single-player mode. You have to find someone else to compete against in real-time using Nextpeer’s network. Given that the game is blowing up and is currently ranked #14 on the free charts in the U.S., it’s adding between 60,000 and 70,000 ?users a day to Nextpeer’s network. Yesterday, Nextpeer served 200,000 multiplayer tournaments, with a peak of 300 players per second. The startup has about 100 games on its platform. Okome says he’s now making between $2,000 and $3,000 per day from advertising and in-app purchases of different racing characters and power boosts. “It’s pretty cool to be making money from something that isn’t my job and is fun,” he said. Initially he used Game Center, but got feedback from players that they wanted to compete against others. “In the beginning, we didn’t have tons and tons of players,” Okome said. “You’d always just have to wait for people to come and play. We’d get reviews saying that the game was cool but that people wanted to play against somebody.” In a networking group about building games, he learned about Nextpeer and quickly integrated the company’s SDK or software development kit with an engineer he had hired off of oDesk. He says he’s

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9c3SWm02rpI/

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