Twitter based Terminator Salvation International “Game” - May 23rd, 2009

I’ve been playing this Terminator Salvation International Twitter “Game” since i first heard about it, which was just after launch, i believe. I use the term game quite loosely as really it’s just about sending messages to everyone that follows you on twitter when you’re told to by the elusive @resistance2018.
@resistance2018 has ended up with 2963 followers. So that’s officially almost 3000 people ‘playing’ this thing, which is ok for a pretty obscure concept, but sounds a lot less impressive when it’s supposed to be targeted at an international audience. I’m really not sure how i would have found out about it had i not been in a social media-connected industry and read the press about it’s launch. Perhaps it’s also linked off the main Terminator Salvation site somewhere.

This was my favourite points update. It almost made me want to stop right here.
It’s goal was to turn players into mini marketing machines, as the only way t earn points was to tweet or retweet something at given times which sends messages to everyone that is following you, naturally. If you don’t tweet much this makes you look pretty obsessed by the Terminator franchise. If you’re following it closely you’re tweeting a few times a day about john connor, or the resistance, or the machines or death row, which sometimes did come across as quite morbid. But i suppose it achieved it’s goal as i don’t have too many followers (around 100) but i reckon i must have posted about 80 messages relating to this game during the course of it. Better than a kickinthenuts, 80*100 = 8000 messages to people about Terminator Salvation. Take out the spammers that follow me, that’s maybe 4000 messages to people that i know / know of
This makes the total touch points of the 2963 playing the game into a much more impressive number of people exposed.
The instructions for this game went like this…
1. Follow Terminator Salvation on Twitter (@resistance2018)
2. Log In on 2018blog.com
3. Watch for tweets from @resistance2018
4. Send answers via @replies with hash tags to @resistance2018 or RT through the blog
5. You will receive a direct messages in Twitter with point updates
and the details of how to actually do it…
Tweets will utilize abbreviations to identify message types. Resistance Assignments will begin with RA: followed by the specific message type abbreviation, as in:
• RA:WM
• RA:TR
• RA:PTNext, an action command and the question, as in:
• RA:WM Decode “OHJN”
• RA:TR “What is the last name of the leader of the Resistance?”
• RA:PT Complete “_O_N _O_NN_R”You will likewise be required to reply with a set format:
• @Resistance2018 JOHN #RA:WM
• @Resistance2018 CONNOR #RA:TR
• @Resistance2018 JOHN CONNOR #RA:PT
Sounds pretty straightforward, and it was. What it wasn’t is fun, which i generally prefer games to be. But i was hooked, and when i received bonus points for being one of the first to reply, i was chuffed.

Cracking the 1000, joining the sub squadron
The other part of the game was losing points. Occasionally you would be ‘harvested’ which means that you automatically lose a percentage of your points. There was seemingly no reasoning for the timing of this, and no way to stop it, awesome. It happened now and then to me, maybe 6 times during the course of the game, generally on the weekend. Odd, annoying, but it shook things up a bit when someone high on the leader board got harvested as you would climb the ladder for doing nothing. It could have been a bit better to be able to do something to avoid it though. I’m sure people would have gone to great lengths in marketing this film to their friends to avoid harvesting. Maybe if you got a tattoo on your forehead you could avoid being harvested?
I ended up scoring 1210 points, which has left me in the ’submarine squadron’. Quite fitting as i’ve been at work all night for the last few weeks watching this game progress while working on a site for submarines. The idea of squadrons was a good one as it really did give you a focus and motivation to get to the next level. Mind you it would have been nice to receive something via email for reaching a new rank. A making of docco from the film, a coupon code for the previous films on blu-ray, unreleased shots from the production or something? Surely that wouldn’t have been too hard.

John Connor is very lonely in his squadron
At the end of the day I thought it was ok. As as a concept it is quite interesting and innovative, it’s potentially the first of it’s kind, although there are a few other Twitter “games” around, none of them are very compelling (neither is this one). Twitter wasn’t really designed as a gaming platform though, and the word ‘game’ is really just a cute way to disguise the fact that you might give away some prizes worth very little to a bunch of people that will use word-of-mouth to talk about your blockbuster film for a while.
So now i suppose i wait to see if there was anything to it apart from being part of the marketing machine. I cant find references to prizes for finishing it / scoring highly. I’d think that it being an ‘international’ game target to an international audience that getting in the top 30 might award me something, but i’m not really holding my breath.
A few final notes…
• It was all pretty simple, but also very repetitive, i think i must have tweeted the term “john connor” about 6 times during the course of the game.
• The word scrambles doubled and tripled up, which made them much easier to decipher the second and third time. Dumb. Surely there are 100s of words unique to that franchise.
• no one actually made it to the top squadron, which required 1500 points.
• I did learn a few things about the film though and now feel like i understand the characters roles a lot better. Mind you, i’m assuming that it’s a bit of a mindless action movie that really isn’t going to be too profound or hard to follow.
• It ended very abruptly
• I’m really glad it’s over. But to be honest, i was friggen hooked, and i still don’t know why.

Awesome, but why?


May 23rd, 2009 at 11:35 pm
Although only 2963 people were ‘playing’ it all their followers would have noticed – I certainly noticed you were playing it. I couldn’t be arsed myself but the number of potential people exposed to it could easily be 10 or 100 times greater than those direct followers.
May 24th, 2009 at 12:09 am
Yeah totally, heaps of people would have been exposed to it. i would have thought that would make people more likely to follow @resistance2018 even if they didn’t reply, i’m assuming a bunch of people followed to see what it was about but didn’t engage. Perhaps it was just annoying for most, did it annoy you to have it show up in your feed? I did got a couple of WTF comments from people not connecting it to the Terminator movie over the last 2 weeks.
May 26th, 2009 at 11:45 pm
Thanks for posting about this. I knew it was about terminator, and it was clearly a marketing driven thing, but I was still firmly in the WTF camp. I mean, I guess they managed to promote the brand.. but they also managed to piss me off too. It seemed a lot like most of the twitter marketing stuff that seems to be around, which is like a pyramid scheme of marketing people tweeting links to other marketing people about how to tweet links about marketing. I’m not going to follow anyone who’s doing that, so I suspect they’re all talking to themselves.
Maybe you can use this experience to somehow create a twitter game which contains elements worthy of being called a game?