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Austin360 blogs > Digital Savant > Archives > 2007 > October > 11 > Entry

AMD launches gaming portal… for why, I don’t know

I hate to bag on a local site. It’s not really my thing, you know. I like to accentuate the positive. Fill the world with joy and rainbows. I am known to eat delicious ice cream and smile while I do it.

But I’ve been poking around AMD’s new gaming portal Web site, which, in an inspired bit of branding is called “AMD GAME!”

It was developed locally by a company called Design Reactor and when you first visit to the site, you see a nice graphic for “Team Fortress 2.” This is a great game and a very recent one, so you hope that the site will have up-to-the-minute news and other content to keep you coming back.

Unfortunately, the content is wrapped in a bubble of marketing and branding so thick that a young John Travolta could live in there, free of disease.

Here’s the third “Latest News” headline from the front page: “AMD and SAPPHIRE to Showcase HD Gaming Innovation.” Wow! Newsy!

There are some feeble attempts at building community. You could join an online chat and create a profile for yourself by logging in. But I’m not sure why you’d stick around. At the top of the Community Page is an interesting looking link to a developer’s diary for the game “Call of Juarez.” When you click on it to read the article, it spits back, “Sorry, could not find the requested article.”

On a page of featured games, there’s a box that goes with the highly anticipated PC game “Crysis,” that says, “Image not available.”

The “Image not available” also appears, more disturbingly under the area of “Images” for multimedia related to the game “Blazing Angels 2.” Why even put the game there if there are no images for it?

The reviews on the site also seem incomplete. No review of “Quake Wars; Enemy Territory” or “Team Fortress 2?” The reviews that do appear (the most recent one is of “Stranglehold”) are not attributed to any particular writer or Web site. Should we trust these reviewers? It’s hard when we don’t even know who they are.

The site’s mascot is a computer-generated action lady (guess how much clothes she’s wearing) named Ruby. I’m guessing she’s supposed to be responsible for the site’s content. If this is so, Ruby should spend more time updating and writing and less time jumping away from fireballs.

If this were a test Web site or something somebody had put together and I just happened upon it, I’d be a lot less critical. But the site was pitched to me by a PR person for a possible story. In the PR pitch, we find this information: “This is certainly one of the toughest markets to impress. Gamers are demanding and expect solid interactive design with a massive amount of relevant features and content, which AMDGAME! delivers…” said Leon Papkoff, CEO of Design Reactor.

Unfortunately, I have to report that in comparison with even the lowliest of gaming Web sites, the site has much less than a “Massive amount” of content and right now is more broken and incomplete than a marketing site for a major gaming company should be.

I’m not sure who this Web site is for, but there’s nothing there that makes me want to visit again. I couldn’t recommend it to any serious PC gamer. Or really any casual gamer, either.

Who wants ice cream?

Permalink | Comments (4) | Post your comment Categories: Austin, Internet, Videogames

Comments

By Billy

October 12, 2007 9:49 AM | Link to this

if someone asked what i thought about the site. id say its a good start or great template.So i totally agree, the site is a joke i saw it a while ago, i guess it hasent changed. i just figured it was under construction, since AMD purchaced ATI i figured they would have some cool new gaming hardware.

By bbbl67

October 12, 2007 1:20 AM | Link to this

I second "vsjlc"'s comments. What were you thinking when you wrote this article Omar? Or more appropriately what were you shooting up your arm? The site was "wrapped in a bubble of marketing and branding"? AMD is in the business of selling video cards and processors! How could you have been expecting a game review website? Acquire a semblence of logic some day.

Omar replies: The site was pitched to me (by AMD, by the way; not Intel) as a portal for gamers with reviews, previews, videos and other info relevant to PC gamers, not as a marketing site.

So, on their invitation, I went and looked at it. And it's not good.

If you compare AMD GAME! to even the most rudimentary of game sites, you'll find that it pales, significantly. I just hate to see them spending money on such a poor product. They're missing the boat on this one.

Thanks for reading. You'll be happy to know I'm currently pricing senses of logic on Ebay, hoping to score a good deal.

By Authority

October 12, 2007 12:52 AM | Link to this

Vsjlc is too busy wrapping tin foil around his head to check facts -- this is the go go aughts after all.

By vsjlc

October 11, 2007 11:48 PM | Link to this

Omar, thanks for saying a bunch of nothing. You are proof that Intel's under-the-table marketing money is well-spent.

Omar replies: Thanks! Would that there had been an actual check under the table for me to spend. Oh well.

Are you suggesting that this is a GOOD gaming site? Go take a look for yourself. I'm not lyin', dude.

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