Zynga, which specializes in games for social-networking sites, has received $29 million in a new funding round led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Institutional Venture Partners.
The round, announced Wednesday, also includes funding from previous investors Union Square Ventures, Foundry Group, and Avalon Ventures.
Zynga, based in San Francisco and started by Tribe.net social-network founder Mark Pincus, added that Bing Gordon, a Kleiner Perkins partner and former chief creative officer of Electronic Arts, is joining Zynga's board. Zynga also announced its acquisition of YoVille, which it describes as the "largest virtual world game on social networks."
The start-up announced an initial funding round of $10 million in January with investors including LinkedIn Chairman Reid Hoffman and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel.
Zynga's social games include a poker match that lets players send virtual drinks to friends. According to its site, Zynga also offers other casino games, word games, role-playing, and board games.
The service, which boasts 18 million monthly visitors, makes money through ads and selling customers add-ons to the games.
If there was any doubt that online advertising was cooling down, this news might make you think twice.
ContextWeb, a contextual advertising firm and operator of the ADSDAQ Exchange, has closed a $26 million Series D funding round, the company said Tuesday.
The round was led by Investor Growth Capital, with participation from all existing investors: DFJ, DFJ Gotham Ventures, Updata Partners, DFJ New England, and Gold Hill Capital.
This brings ContextWeb's total equity investment to $54 million.
The funding will be used to grow the ADSDAQ Exchange, which offers a way for advertisers and publishers to buy and sell ad inventory, the company said.
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