Video Interview With Ted Sorom, Founder of Rixty: The Average American Household Has $90 In Change

tedsoromlogoAt the Social Gaming Summit this year I had the opportunity to engage in a video interview with Ted Sorom, the CEO and co-founder of alternative games monetization platform Rixty.  Rixty helps players pay for their virtual currency and virtual goods in their social games by paying with the spare change they have lying around the house.  We were able to discuss just how much change lies around the average American household, how CoinStar allows people to use those spare coins to play games and get virtual goods, and discuss where social games will be in three years.

Ted’s product, Rixty, has recently announced partnerships with most major game companies and was definitely a big buzz generator at the Social Games Summit this year.  Most platforms try to use the Rixty service to enable younger players and people with loose change to put some money into games without a ton of effort.  His comments on the future of social gaming were particularly interesting

Take a look at the video, and follow me on Twitter for my latest updates, including links to upcoming video interviews from other game designers, developers and business leaders from SGS 2010.

  Tags:
blog comments powered by Disqus
-Download Facebook Pages eBook Promotion-

Upcoming Events

Think Mobile - West

September 23, 2010 | Mission Bay Conference Center at UCSF, San Francisco

Think Mobile Logo

Reinvent Your Business -- Innovate with unique mobile offerings and understand key mobile metrics.

Smartphone Games Summit

September 24, 2010 | Hotel Nikko, San Francisco

Smartphone Games Summit Logo

The Smartphone Games Summit is a one-day conference focused on the emerging smartphone games space.

Social Ad Summit

October 1, 2010 | The New Yorker Hotel, New York City

Social Ad Summit Logo

Strengthen your brand through social media: Best practices for social media marketing & advertising.

Virtual Goods Summit - West

October 12-13, 2010 | Moscone West, San Francisco

Virtual Goods Summit Logo

Once restricted to the world of online gaming, virtual goods and currencies are beginning to influence the development of social networks, community sites, and many other new and exciting markets.