Direct2Drive

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Direct2Drive
Web address direct2drive.com
Slogan "Download today. Own forever."
Commercial? Yes
Type of site Desktop video gaming
Registration To purchase
Owner GameFly
Launched 2004
Alexa rank positive decrease 556,830 (February 2014)[1]
Current status Active
Direct2Drive offers a download manager for its service.

Direct2Drive (commonly D2D) was an online game store offering PC videogames via direct download. On May 25, 2011, GameFly acquired Direct2Drive from IGN Entertainment, Inc..[2]

Competition with Steam

It was one of the major competitors to Valve's Steam digital storefront and has been described as "the other major purveyor of digital distribution".[3] A non-scientific survey run by gaming news site Kotaku in 2010 indicated that of around 30,000 respondents, 8% had purchased a game from Direct2Drive.[4] While Steam customers can browse the storefront via the downloadable client or the website, the D2D store was only available on the website. D2D did not offer a full fledged client, however, the service did have a free download manager. Additionally, many of the services features, including downloading, were available from former sister site GameSpy's software Comrade.

Business

Launched in 2004, IGN has claimed "exponential growth in sales" since that time. It offered over 3,000 titles through relationships with more than 300 game publishers.[5][6] Direct2Drive sponsored a $10,000 award at the Independent Games Festival called the D2D Vision Award, which "celebrates independent developers exemplifying innovation in design coupled with excellence in game-play".[7] In 2009, the site made headlines by refusing to sell Activision's Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 due to that game's integration with Valve's Steamworks service. Users buying Modern Warfare 2 from a reseller such as Direct2Drive would be forced to also download and install the Steam client.[8]

References

Users of the previous service, direct2drive were essentially robbed of their accounts and games in a woeful breach of contract that the FBI should be aware of. http://www.pcgamer.com/2011/12/23/direct2drive-becomes-gamefly-games-possibly-lost-in-process/

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.