This is either a brilliant Photoshop job, some canny viral political campaigning, or both: An Xbox 360 gamer playing Burnout Paradise spotted an Obama campaign billboard with a “Paid for by Obama for President” caption as he whizzed by in his turbocharged sports car, Game Politics is reporting. The site was unable to confirm the ad’s authenticity with Burnout publisher Electronic Arts; I’ve left messages with both EA and the Obama campaign and will update this post if we get confirmation either way.

Its veracity aside, the virtual billboard raises an interesting question: Are political ads in video games a good idea? In terms of eyeballs, I’d have to say yes. Roughly one-third of American households own an Xbox 360, Sony PS3 or Nintendo Wii. In terms of effectiveness, Brandweek recently detailed a survey undertaken by its fellow Nielsen Games division in which 11 percent of gamers said they bought a brand after seeing it advertised in a game.

Of course, buying a brand of shoes or soda is a totally different prospect than buying a politician’s brand in the polling booth. And young voters — the kind most likely to notice an in-game ad — are also the least likely to show up on Election Day.

At the very least, however, several gamer sites are now excitedly talking about the Obama billboard, which translates into some level of viral messaging success. It’s certainly a better idea than John McCain’s Pork Invaders, a knock-off of a video game that was popular when Sen. McCain was already in his 40s.

Good idea? Bad idea?




  1. Hyph3n says:

    Brilliant! Obama is using technologies like Twitter and whatnot the same way that Bush used churches during his election… as a direct conduit to a voting block. In this case, young people.

  2. lock_down says:

    Dunno if it’s a good or bad idea…but I want that car.

  3. jMcM says:

    My friends,

    Look, people liked Space Invaders. So that’s why we based our free game on it. Shooting VETOs into lipsticked pigs is more fun for me than anything. And these days, I mean AnyThing.

    Except, of course, our next new free game coming out next Wednesday, just in time for the last debate.

    It’s a rollicking test of skills that has two players competing to bash Obama’s head back and forth across the screen with vertical paddles made from the words Victory and Honor.

  4. Angel H. Wong says:

    Bad idea, whoever is playing that game is most likely to continue playing it and not give a damn about the election as long as he gets to drive a hi-res cgi penile extension.

  5. sargasso says:

    Viral marketing a political slogan inside a CG virtual environment? My big word for today is, superficiality.

  6. Ah_Yea says:

    Clever marketing, but it probably won’t increase voter turnout unless you can vote thru X-Box live.

  7. GigG says:

    It’s better than the Obama Spam I’ve been getting.

  8. GF says:

    EA has had plans to offer advertising like this for quite a while. They had intended to try it out on BF2 to help pay for ranked servers but it never came to fruition.

  9. GRtak says:

    If this is true, it just shows how tech savy his staff is. Most campaigns wonder how to reach more people and this is an avenue that most never would have used.

  10. zebulon says:

    Obama’s staff simply went to people like Massive Inc. wiht their ad, and they did what’s needed to have it in the game. No big deal…

  11. T-Enterprise says:

    I was playing Burnout Paradise the other night there and don’t recall seeing a billboard with that on it. However being in the UK it might only be visible if your in the USA. Either that or I was going WAY too fast to see it =P.

  12. zebulon says:

    Obama’s staff simply went to people like Massive Inc. wiht their ad, and they did what’s required to have it in the game. No big deal…


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