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Shop Authentic Company finds niche by selling video game rosters:
By LUKE MEREDITH, AP Sports Writer
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)—Video gamers crave authenticity, and for the most part
NCAA Football ‘09 delivers. From the famed hedges of Georgia’s Sanford Stadium
to the iconic yellow stripes on Michigan’s helmet, the game is as real as fake
can get.
There is, however, an exception.
Game maker EA Sports isn’t allowed to use players’ real names because the
NCAA prohibits the sale of items that include a student-athlete’s name, picture
or likeness. So even though virtual Florida is led by a spitting image of Tim
Tebow—right down to the cannon arm and brute running style—he’s known in the
game simply as “QB #15.”
Enter Brian Kaldenberg, the 25-year-old whiz kid president of
Gamerosters.com.
Tucked away in a small, disheveled office in the shadow of Iowa’s Kinnick
Stadium, Gamerosters.com is a leading provider of college video game rosters, a
cottage industry few know exists. Gamerosters, launched by Kaldenberg from his
dorm room at Iowa State in 2004, is expected to bring in about $200,000 in
revenue this year against $70,000 in expenses simply by putting names to virtual
faces.
Customers who otherwise would have to spend untold hours typing in more than
10,000 names can just buy a memory card from Gamerosters, plug it into their
console and presto: every Football Bowl Subdivision roster comes to life. All
for a fee of anywhere from $11.95 to $44.95—at the high end, that’s nearly as
much as a game itself.
“We really capitalize off of convenience,” Kaldenberg said.
And business is better than ever. Gamerosters has grown from roughly 700
customers buying rosters for one game, NCAA Football by EA Sports, to about
5,500 customers and plans to provide rosters for three games—NCAA Football
‘09, College Hoops 2K9 and March Madness ‘09.
The reason there’s a market for completed rosters is because few people have
the time or patience to fill them in themselves. It isn’t any easier for
Gamerosters.
Kaldenberg first works sources within the gaming industry to get advance
copies of the games, which his company needs to create the original file. Game
in hand, Kaldenberg and his team begin a decidedly tedious process that is
usually completed after six 18-hour days.
Using the Web to formulate as complete and accurate a roster as possible,
Kaldenberg, colleague Spencer Kerr and a handful of part-timers methodically
type in every FBS player’s name into a single game for XBox 360, Playstation 2
and Playstation 3.
Blank memory cards are then put into a console, loaded up and shipped all
over the world. Customers can also download the rosters from Gamerosters or mail
in their own memory card to have filled.
Kaldenberg says that although hard-core gamers make up a large portion of
his customers, he’s also seen mothers buy the rosters for their kids and wives
buy them for their husbands. Professional athletes like Houston Rockets forward
Shane Battier, former NFL star Curtis Conway and a number of college athletes
also snap up the cards, and many of Gamerosters’ customers come back year after
year.
“When selling a product over the Internet, trust is a huge thing. Once you
gain trust from someone, they will pay for your product the next year, even if
it’s more expensive,” Kaldenberg said.
But Gamerosters.com has not been without controversy.
Until recently, it faced competition from companies that offered free
rosters. But Kaldenberg managed to push Gamerosters to the top of the page on
Google.com—much like AAAA Plumbing does with the phone book—and put faith in
his belief that people would pay for a product with a professional feel and
quality customer service.
“People, if they’re paying for it, they feel like it’s better,” Kaldenberg
said. “People are leery of just downloading a free file or mailing their memory
card off to someone who says it’s for free.”
He was right, and the competition has since relented. Kaldenberg said he’s
spent $12,000 over the past eight months to buy out two competitors,
FKrosters.com and PSXSports.com, and claims that both moves have already paid
for themselves many times over.
That hasn’t stopped Gamerosters from feeling the heat from those in the
gaming world who vent their frustrations on, you guessed it, message boards.
“There’s a number of people out there who feel like I’m breaking the law,”
Kaldenberg said. “They just don’t like us because we make money.”
There’s also the matter of the NCAA, an organization whose rules aren’t
always clear. But Kaldenberg said he’s never heard from the NCAA or EA Sports
about what he does.
EA Sports spokeswoman Julie Michel said in a written statement that the
company does “not support, endorse or approve the selling of third party
rosters for our licensed NCAA Football games from EA Sports.”
Phone messages left for the NCAA were not returned.
Kaldenberg said the reason he believes that the NCAA and EA Sports haven’t
given him grief is because they wouldn’t have much of a case. After all, the
game already has a built-in function that allows gamers to fill in the rosters
themselves.
Gamerosters just makes the whole process effortless.
“They want to have the names and they want to have it hassle-free,”
Kaldenberg said. “They use us because we provide great service for them and
they don’t have to be tech-savvy at all.”
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