October 13, 2010
New Jersey-based multimedia company CD Meyer Inc. today announced the company’s new offering, Brain Flexers Sampler, a sampling of its fully-animated visual games for digital signage applications.
With the number of digital signage networks increasing daily, unique content is a growing concern for more and more digital signage managers, and CD Meyer Inc. developed the Brain Flexers animated visual game content to address this growing concern, the company says. CD Meyer is offering a sample disc containing eight fully animated visual games at a one-time cost to give content managers the ability to implement eye-catching content into their signage playlist for a very small financial commitment, the company says.
"The basic idea is this: include eye-catching and entertaining content in your playlists and get people to look at the screens longer," CD Meyer president Chris Meyer said in the announcement.
The Brain Flexers are designed to accomplish just that, the company says. Visitors to a venue will see a visual game on the screen that they can "play" in their head, without the need for interaction with the screen or other people. Then they’ll keep looking at the screen waiting for the next game. Meanwhile advertisers are getting attention and the return on investment is growing, the company says.
The games, which run from 40 seconds to over a minute, range in subject matter from points of interest to pop culture concepts and much more. The animated effects are designed to draw attention and keep people looking and thinking, the company says. Brain Flexers are currently available in multiple video file types and in both horizontal and vertical formats. The content and design of the visual games can also be customized for a client’s specifications and subject matter.
The Brain Flexers Sampler contains eight animated visual games – two games each of the four game styles. The sampler includes "Word Find" (conservation and coins), "What’s Different?" (aquarium and carousel), "Where on Earth?" (New York City and Great Barrier Reef), and "What is it?" (jellyfish and U.S. Capitol).