MediaFile

DC Universe Online: Can a Lex Luthor plot get people to pay for Sony’s new MMO?

Holy MMO, Batman! Sony Online Entertainment sure hopes DC Universe Online — the splashy new massively multiplayer online game that hit stores today – won’t share the fate of the caped crusaders’ legions of arch-villains over the past few decades.

Fans willing to shell out $59.99 upfront and then $14.99 a month can create their very own superhero and play — on PCs or Playstation 3s — much-loved characters from Superman to Batman and Wonder Woman, in locales eerily familiar to comic geeks from  Metropolis to Gotham City.

Reuters first reported back in 2008 about the arrival of the  world’s first licensed MMO comic book game. Tuesday’s launch is part of  Warner Bros’ and parent Time Warner Inc’s major push to fully exploit the DC brands in video games.

The game looks to tap the “tens of millions of action gamers who have never played massive multiplayer games before,” said John Blakely, vice president of development for Sony Online Entertainment, the division of Sony that produced the MMO pioneer EverQuest.

“When you log on to that server to Metropolis and there’s a thousand people in there working with you and against you, that’s something you’ve ever seen before on your action games,” Blakely said.

from Shop Talk:

Check Out Line: Vampires and caped heroes rule in online swap world

taylorCheck out the popularity of vampires and werewolves, Taylor Swift and caped superheros in the online trading world.

Swaptree.com,  an online company that allows consumers to trade books, CDs, DVDs and video games for free with others, provided its top swaps of 2009.

Topping the books lists among most traded were "The Host," which topped four offerings in the Twilight series.  Albums by Taylor Swift (pictured) claimed the top two spots on the most traded CDs list, while "The Dark Knight," the latest Batman movie, was No. 1 on the movies list. The most traded video game was Wii Fit.