| Game Show Battle Heats Up Online 
 thestandard.net
 
 By Lessley Anderson
 
 The top online game show sites, Uproar and Sony's
 The Station, are at it again in a battle that pits
 Family Feud against Jeopardy. Uproar's recent
 partnership with media company Pearson Television
 gives Uproar's parent, E-Pub Holdings, online rights
 to high-profile game show brands Match Game and
 Family Feud in exchange for a 10.9 percent equity
 stake in E-Pub.
 
 Sony Online Entertainment, creator of the online
 versions of Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune, has
 claimed the edge on the high-trafficked Uproar
 because of its access to a TV network and
 well-known brands. Now Uproar can claim the
 same.
 
 Attendees of last year's NATPE trade show, the
 television industry's most hyped event, could have
 predicted the current online battle. The big buzz
 was the return of the game show. At that time,
 E-Pub Holdings, creator of Uproar, had been
 developing successful cobranded versions of their
 strangely popular trivia game Cosmo's Conundrum
 for sites including CBS SportsLine and CNN. Sony
 got in the game last spring, when it launched online
 versions of its popular game shows Wheel of
 Fortune and Jeopardy. Now, one year later, TV has
 caught up. Match Game is back on the air and a
 new version of Family Feud is scheduled for the fall
 - and Uproar is slated to develop multiplayer online
 versions for them both.
 
 "This is very good for us, because we know how to
 make game shows work online," says E-Pub's
 president, David Becker.
 
 The online versions of Match Game and Family
 Feud will be hyped on air, in much the way Sony
 publicizes its Wheel and Jeopardy sites. Uproar
 and its affiliated sites currently have 4 million                  unique
 visitors a month, while Sony lags behind, according
 to RelevantKnowledge. Sony, however, claims 2.3
 million registered users.
 
 "As far as Pearson and E-Pub go, it's certainly
 exciting news for the games world in general," says
 Sony Online Entertainment President Lisa
 Simpson. "Pearson has some great titles, [but]
 we're continuing to tap into the vast library at
 Columbia TriStar. We think it's a challenging area."
 
 Sony will launch a much-talked-about online version
 of The Dating Game sometime this quarter,
 complete with funky avatars and the ability to flirt
 and chat in real time. In a move away from its game
 show market, the company has also started a
 game-development company called Red Eye
 Interactive to create titles that will appeal to The
 Station's active gamer audience. Red Eye is a
 spin-off of Sony Computer Entertainment Group's
 989 Studios, which has created fantasy games for
 the Sony PlayStation.
 
 "Our goal is to be the dominant gamer destination
 on the Net, so we want to offer a broad slate of
 games," says Simpson. "We've noticed crossover
 in our college student audience from role-play
 games like ChronX to our game show properties."
 
 Uproar's Becker says his company has no plans to
 woo the gamer audience.
 
 "The gamer-teen market seems to be Sony's new
 thing. As a company, I think what we're looking to
 do is to reach broad audiences where we can on
 the Net." And that means game shows.
 
 |