Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

USA Today

Pac-Man' is going digital

USA TodayThis is just the beginning, says Michael Cai of Parks Associates research firm. "Gaming companies are realizing the value that is buried in their catalog."

Money spent on online video gaming is expected to rise from $1 billion this year to $3.7 billion in 2009, says market researchers DFC Intelligence.

While Pogo.com and other well-established game centers on Yahoo and MSN.com cater to casual game players, GameTap launched last fall with a focus on games played in video game arcades, such as Asteroids and Defender, and on classic game systems like the Atari 2600 (Breakout), Intellivision (Astrosmash) and Sega Genesis (Sonic the Hedgehog).

From the article "Pac-Man' is going digital," by Mike Snider.

Previously In The News

Runner-up wireless standard tries for phone market.

It also returns HomeRF to an effort it began as early as 1998 — to convince consumers that advanced telephone services made HomeRF products worth buying, said Kurt Scherf, the vice president of rese...

New technologies make for smarter homes,

IBM recently aired a television commercial that featured a repairman arriving at a house unannounced. A futuristic refrigerator with smart technology did a self-diagnostic test, uncovered a problem,...

Second Screen creates a 'Bambi' for multitaskers

Last November, Verizon launched its Flex View feature that lets video-on-demand customers watch movies on TV, computers and mobile devices. "Whether it's a standard or studios do it individually, wh...

Taking aim at gaming consoles

But Nintendo was the last console system to add Netflix streaming and could gain from adding other TV and movie content. "That is something Nintendo has been weak on," says Pietro Macchiarella, res...