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Disney brings playable ‘advergames’ to Hulu and ESPN

Your next Hulu ad break could feature a Topgolf-branded game you play with your remote.

Your next Hulu ad break could feature a Topgolf-branded game you play with your remote.

An image showing an “advergame” on a TV
An image showing an “advergame” on a TV
Disney’s new “Beat the Clock” ad format will let you play golf with your remote.
Image: Disney
Emma Roth
is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

Disney is sprinkling a new kind of playable ad across Hulu and ESPN. The new ad format, called “advergames,” will let you interact with the ads using your remote, as reported earlier by Adweek.

You might see two different advergames to start: Quiz Show and Beat the Clock. While Quiz Show presents a series of trivia questions, Beat the Clock challenges viewers to land golf balls into specific targets using their remote. Of course, they’re branded experiences, as the Beat the Clock ad features branding for Topgolf, and the Quiz Show game will prominently display an ad for a company while you play.

Quiz Show replaces your traditional ad break with a sponsored trivia game.
Quiz Show replaces your traditional ad break with a sponsored trivia game.
Image: BrightLine

The pitch for this format is that it gives advertisers feedback on whether viewers actually noticed their content — plus, more kinds of ads mean more money for streamers. In its most recent earnings report, Disney’s streaming business inched closer to profitability after drawing more users to its ad-supported tier.

Shoppable ads on Disney Plus link you directly to a product.
Shoppable ads on Disney Plus link you directly to a product.
Image: Disney

Disney is partnering with the streaming TV company BrightLine to enable the new playable ad formats. It has also brought shoppable ads to Disney Plus made by Kerv, which show QR codes that link you directly to a product page. As noted by Adweek, shoppable ads are programmatic, meaning advertisers purchase the ads automatically, and an algorithm will decide who to show them to and when.

On ESPN, the ads seem inevitable, at least for now, but on Disney’s other streaming platforms, your only option to avoid the ads is to pay a bit more each month.

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