CamHostage
Member
Maybe GAF should, Evilore said a while back that adblockers were becoming a problem for the site.
Adblocker software sometimes also screws up the site loading/performance. This is more a problem with video and rich media than standard graphic ads, but there are lots of cases where a site admin is getting complains about the website that can actually be traced to the blocking software, and then the admins have to make the decision about whether to fix the site so that 'pirates' can browse the site comfortably and not neg their reputation. If you're running crappy, draining ads (and sometimes that's beyond your control; you contract with a company that delivered one thing in the beginning but that also is feeling the crush of the dying market and has sold out its ad module,) that's one thing, but if you're trying to run a legit business and have to make compromises and do extra work in order to lose more money, that pretty much sucks.
It's up to gaming sites to make more intelligent lateral moves they need to make rather than pretend that band-aids like "limited articles" plans work. They don't. People will consume the content and move on without making a change to their browsing habits. Patreon and premium subscription content from strong personalities will be the future.
A) That market is new and untested; it's performing unusually well now, but it could crash so easily. And even per-site, you're so dependent on your audience that you may have to compromise content or be wary of controversy in order to keep subs up.
B) Sub/gifting seems to be working for Video and sometimes podcasting ... but try getting people to ever pay for written content! If people don't see somebody singing and dancing for their duckets, they don't feel as compelled to support them. And to me, great and well-prepared written content (like the Vice Halo History article, a recent discovery that I want more of and can't see working in the new "personality" market) is worth much more than off-the-cuff jabberjawing.
You're right, this is the direction the market is going, and you're seeing that move in your favorite sites. And to me, that direction sucks for the future of game journalism, a job that is already on the ropes.