Zynga CEO Mark Pincus
(Credit:
Rafe Needleman/CNET)
Zynga CEO Mark Pincus said the company is not trying to cash in on the existing hardcore gambling market with its foray into online gambling in the U.K. Instead, Zynga will focus on what it knows best -- making gambling games social.
This means displaying bragging rights for when you score big as well as letting your friends see when you don't.
"It makes it more exciting than when you're by yourself in an anonymous poker room," Pincus said during a Morgan Stanley conference in San Francisco today. He wouldn't say when the company would launch into real-money gambling, but in the past the company has said it would start within the first half of this year.
Instead of aiming for serious gamblers, Pincus said Zynga wants to introduce real-money gaming to a mass market in the same way it introduced social gaming to the general public.
"We're not the company to win the hardcore real-money gamers," he said. "But we think we are for the mass market audience."
Zynga started stirring the real-money gambling pot last year when it announced a deal with the U.K.-based poker company Bwin.Party Digital Entertainment to offer online poker and casino games for cash in the U.K. It then made efforts to apply for a gambling operator's license in Nevada, spurring Wall Street to wonder if the struggling company could pick itself up with gambling dollars.
Pincus has been working to restructure Zynga by reducing expenses and shoveling resources to the company's more profitable endeavors. In the process, its workforce has been shrinking, through layoffs and fleeing executives. Just today, Zynga lost some employees when it closed down its Baltimore office and consolidated offices in Texas and New York.
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