AvP’s Brutally Violent Trailer: Pr0n or Good Marketing?
January 20, 2010 by JP Sherman
Filed under Video Game Marketing
Lately, the geekiverse has been all aflutter about Sega’s upcoming game, Aliens vs. Predator. In fact, few movie franchise video games have really generated more excitement. In my personal opinion, the first AvP game was probably the best AvP game to date.
With the release of the new trailer (be fore-warned it’s violent, with graphic mutilations, impalations, decapitations, evicerations and puppy-kicking) most of the major video game blogs have reported on it. The comments on these articles range from excited “OMFG!” to “This is just over the top torture porn”.
As usual, this got me thinking about the marketing of this video game. Is this blatantly over the top imagery designed to whip up the excited masses into a frothing heap of first day sales? Does blatantly promoting the violence somehow make gamers look bad? Is Sega’s marketing brilliant, reprehensible or just somewhere in between?
But first… watch the new trailer.
Got it? Good.
First, the basics. All marketing needs to start with an understanding of the target demographic. Marketers do the research to figure out their audience, their purchasing habits and the desires they want fulfilled. In this case, these are people (mostly male) who’ve consumed a considerable amount of sci-fi horror material. They’ve seen the Alien and Predator series along with the AvP movies that followed them. A portion of that audience reads the graphic novels, played the games and continue to debate in fan forums.
The second part of marketing that I want to focus on is the fact that marketers are tasked in describing what the consumer will actually get when they purchase the product. Some games, like Brutal Legend were promoted as a kick-ass slash game through the “Metalverse”, some of them were visibly pissed off when they found out that there were significant portions of the game that were RTS elements… a genre that has yet to penetrate the console market successfully. I can understand why Brutal Legend was marketed in the way it was marketed. The reaction to a RTS console game is rarely well received. From that angle, the marketing failed. They pushed a product that didn’t give the consumer enough information to fulfill their expectations.
In this case, the marketing of Aliens vs. Predator gives a tight group of the gaming demographic EXACTLY what they expect and what they desire. This new trailer is probably one of the better trailers I’ve seen for a video game of that sort. It communicates clearly, mixing what appears to be ingame scenes, pre-rendered scenes and actual gameplay footage into a bloody montage.
In fact, one of the quick scenes that’s stuck in my head is the part where you have the “mouth view” of the alien as it rushes in to separate a marine’s face from the rest of his head.
Yet is this a cheap attempt to gain media attention, to excite gamers by giving them what could be the bloodiest moments in the game? Probably, but for the right audience, this is exactly right. This is exactly what they want. Fans of the Aliens and Predator stories (like me) have come to expect this over the top brutality in our comics, games and movies about this particular universe.
I’ve watched it dozens of times… and I don’t think I could get enough of this game.
However, Sega needs to watch it… if this game sucks, then this same trailer which is damn good video game marketing could become a touchpoint of fan anger if the actual game doesn’t live up to the standard that it’s presenting. So even good pre-launch marketing could immediately turn into bad marketing if the product doesn’t live up to the hype.
AvP’s Brutally Violent Trailer: Pr0n or Good Marketing?



There's an obvious trend to take brutal movie franchises and sanitize them into PG-13 while having just few enough F-bombs to keep them out of "R" territory. All 4 Aliens movies and both Predator movies: R. AvP: PG-13. 1st 3 Terminator movies: R. #4: PG-13. Apparently some people can't stand the thought of popular franchises being gruesome even when they've been that way all along! I know we're used to the famous Alien chest bursting scene now and we're numb to it, but watch it again: it's disturbing. These are not tame franchises. To those who don't like the level of violence, why in the world would you play a game based on these incredibly violent movies? I'm sorry you're used to Hollywood softening everything for you but these 2 are, and always have been, very violent franchises.
yep. what he said.
[New Set on Stun Post] AvP’s Brutally Violent Trailer: Pr0n or Good Marketing? – http://setonstun.com/2010/01/avps-brutal...
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I get the impression that the presentation (i.e. quick glimpses of uber-violence) was designed to divert the viewer's attention from the overall visual quality of the game. Not terribly impressive to my eye.
I dunno… obviously, I haven't played the game, but if the framerate is solid, I think they might be going for more of the graphic novel look in its texturing. I'd happily sacrifice some detail for good gameplay, crazy fast framerate, and fluid combat animations.
Still, I hope the look of the game is more stylistically determined than lack of attention to texturing.
Um, is it bad that I think it looks good?
Only if I'm a big, stupid narcissist. Which I might be.
LOL