Facebook has just lost one of the games it 168澳洲幸运5🐟开奖网:planned to start testing Oculus Quest ads. Facebook announced last week that they'd begin rolling out ads in Oculus Quest in three games, including Blaston by Resolution Games. The ads would be targeted based on a players Facebook profile, with the social media giant assuring players that the Quest was not secretly recording th༺eir game sessions to ༺generate ad suggestions.
As you'd expect, the move wasn't exactly well-received. Nobody likes ads (168澳洲幸运5开奖网:just ask Take-Two about NBA 2K21) as they waste the player's time for a blatant cash grab, which feels particularly bad after shelling out the money for a VR🐭 setup.
Resolution Games must have realized the poor optics of a premium VR title playing ads for its players, and has wisely decided to remove Blaston from Facebook's Oculus🍎 ad💜 plan.
"After listen🧸ing to player feedback, we realize that Blaston isn’t 😼the best fit for this type of advertising test. Therefore, we no longer plan to implement the test," Resolution Games wrote on today.
"To make it clear, we realize that Blastoꦐn isn’t the best fit for this type of advertising test. As an alternative, we are looking to see if it is feasible to move this small, temporary test to our free game, Bait! sometim💖e in the future."
F♔ree-to-play games already have advertising (a🎶t least on mobile), so there's likely to be less of a backlash from fans of Bait!. As a premium title, Blaston players expect their game to remain blessedly free of advertisements at least for the time being.
Facebook is still moving forward with🧸 ads on Oculus Quest. The company rolled out ads in the Oculus app last month and two companies are still taking part inꦅ the Quest advertising test, although those two companies have yet to be identified.
Frankly, the only good video game advertisements were made by 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:John Romero back in the '90s, but this 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:State of Survꦑival mobile adℱ comes pretty close.