Mike Riggs | July 29, 2008
In anticipation of getting bent over the witness stand by Hasbro and Mattel, the Agarwalla brothers shut down their most beloved product today:
In a statement, creators Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla said they agreed to block Scrabulous in the United States and Canada in deference to Facebook's concerns, while continuing to pursue their legal defense. Rajat Agarwalla, describing the measures as "unfortunate," declined further comment.
Facebook said the Agarwalla brothers, not the company, made the decision.
Perhaps the Agarwallas are pretending to acquiesce, allowing their fans to rip Hasbro a new one? The Facebook group "Save Scrabbulous" has 46,198 members as of this writing, several hundred of whom have already publicly complained on the group's "wall."
I wrote about Hasbro's idiocy last week, here.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Not Hasbro's first Scrabble blunder - they've done worse than
this in the past and we keep coming back.
Stefan Fatsis' book "Word Freaks" mixes a decent amount of Scrabble
history with stories of people whose existence revolves around the
game. Pretty good read.
The Facebook group "Save Scrabbulous" has 46,198 members as
of this writing, several hundred of whom have already publicly
complained on the group's "wall."
That's not a lot of people for a Facebook group. "Starving Dogs is
not art" group has 260,435 members, for instance.
Add that to the fact that joining a group is free and takes roughly
five seconds, and writing on the wall not much more.
Occam-
Don't dismiss it out of hand. Facebook users are a savvy bunch.
They don't spend all day sitting around joining hollow groups with
no goals or values, capriciously befriending people they've never
met, or playing games that waste both time and brainpower.
I'll be more careful, Hugh.
As for ed, I'll note that the gifts actually do have some meaning,
as you have to pay for those.
The rumor is the brother turned down a $10 million offer from
Hasbro. They wanted several times that much.
They get no sympathy from me. They got greedy.
The game can still be played at Scrabulous.com. Thanks for giving me a new internet addiction, Reason...Unfortunately I consistently crush the computer robot on the top level so it's no fun anymore...
They get no sympathy from me. They got greedy.
I would think that 500,000 daily users with their eyeballs glued to
their web browsers for minutes on end is worth a lot more than 10
mil.
creators Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla said they agreed to
block Scrabulous in the United States and Canada
Because nobody ever links to a website originating in a foreign
country, right?
Wow, the technical workaround to this restriction might take over 5
minutes to write. Teh Hard.
Pottsy,
They're not exactly in a position to bargain hard. They're going to
lose the lawsuit, guaranteed.
I would think that 500,000 daily users with their eyeballs
glued to their web browsers for minutes on end is worth a lot more
than 10 mil.
They were on a run rate of $300K/year gross revenue.
They might be worth 5X revenue. They turned down 33X
revenue because it wasn't enough.
Screw them.
"I wrote about Hasbro's idiocy last week, here."
When is someone going to write about your idiocy? For christ sake,
somebody fire this douche already.
The rumor is the brother turned down a $10 million offer
from Hasbro.
I assign a credibility discount to this rumor of approximately
98%.
I assign a credibility discount to this rumor of
approximately 98%.
That's nice. Who are you? What is your opinion based on?
I built Yahoo!'s gaming site back in the 1990s, my contacts in the
casual gaming business are quite solid.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245