Tasteless Facebook Ad: Crosshairs on US Military Personnel

I was looking at an event one of my friends created for his birthday when one of the Facebook ads on the upper right caught my eye.  Normally, I don’t pay any attention to Facebook ads because they are usually for stupid things like dating sites, Facebook games and all sorts of services that I would never use, but this one was different.  I was pretty shocked by what I saw.

tasteless facebook ad

Most ads for arcade shooters have cartoony characters in them, but this was different.  The soldiers clearly look like US soldiers in desert camouflage, being viewed through a sniper scope.  They could be soldiers who were deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan.  A quick Google search for American soldiers reveals plenty of photos that look very much like the one used in this advertisement.  Even if they are not American soldiers, I still think it is wrong.

The text in the ad really puts it over the top:

RAW Shooter. No story, no tactics, no costs.  Just aim and shoot.  Addicting.  Click here to PLAY!

I have no problem with shoot ’em up games, but to use real soldiers being targeted via sniper rifle in an ad is in poor taste and offensive.  Many soldiers have died as a result of sniper attack in Iraq and Afghanistan and to make it into a game is really crossing the line.  Whether you agree with the war or not, these soldiers serve our country.  They do not deserve to be targeted in a Facebook ad to promote some dumb game.  This ad is disgusting.

I clicked on the ad and was taken to Gamevance.com, a site that allows you to play a whole bunch of arcade style games.  At first I thought that the ad was created by a freelance search marketing company that gets paid for driving traffic to the company, but could not find an affiliate program.  The site may use another type of affiliate marketing, but I could not find it easily.  There are three possible conclusions.  First, gamevance.com created this ad promote their shoot ’em up game.  Second, a freelance marketer without a connection to gamevance.com created the ad.  Third, there is a chance the soldiers approved their images in this ad, but I highly doubt it.  Gamevance should make sure that this ad is not shown again.

Which brings me to my next question: how did this ad get approved by Facebook?  They usually take at least a day to approve ads when I have used them for different businesses and have some pretty stringent rules for companies to follow before ads are approved.  How did the Facebook Ad approval process allow an ad like this to get through?  Someone at Facebook has some explaining to do.

I also wonder how other Facebook advertisers feel about this ad.  When I saw the RAW Shooter ad, there was a large banner for Freshetta pizza below it.  I wonder how they like being featured on the same page as an ad targeting US military personnel through a sniper scope.  Facebook has advertisers like Freshetta, AT&T and many others.

What do you think?  Is this advertisement offensive?  How do you think it got past Facebook’s approval process?  Do you think other advertisers will be annoyed by this?

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6 Comments

  • Other advertisers will be annoyed if someone makes a big deal about it. Otherwise, it will be brushed under the rug as one of those that just got through the cracks and where facebook will “fix” the problem.

    not likin’ that ad one bit…

  • Other advertisers will be annoyed if someone makes a big deal about it. Otherwise, it will be brushed under the rug as one of those that just got through the cracks and where facebook will “fix” the problem.

    not likin’ that ad one bit…

  • Have you thought of asking the other advertisers what they think of being placed near this ad? Maybe they think people will get hungry after killing soldiers. I think its a nasty tasteless ad, but then I think the other shoot em up games that have cartoonish soldiers dying after a really nice person has chosen to spend time trying to kill them are nasty as well. While the figures are more cartoonish, they flop down very convincingly, just like real dead people. Perhaps watching soldiers on the news not getting dead becomes too much like watching fake soldiers actually dying. I cant even imagine what a parent of a soldier would think of this, much less a parent of a soldier in a combat zone.

  • Have you thought of asking the other advertisers what they think of being placed near this ad? Maybe they think people will get hungry after killing soldiers. I think its a nasty tasteless ad, but then I think the other shoot em up games that have cartoonish soldiers dying after a really nice person has chosen to spend time trying to kill them are nasty as well. While the figures are more cartoonish, they flop down very convincingly, just like real dead people. Perhaps watching soldiers on the news not getting dead becomes too much like watching fake soldiers actually dying. I cant even imagine what a parent of a soldier would think of this, much less a parent of a soldier in a combat zone.

  • You complain about someone using a soldier’s photograph to advertise a game where people pretend to kill someone but say nothing about those same soldiers killing real people in the real world. Let’s not forget that the American state has – over the last two decades – killed hundreds of thousands – quite possibly millions – of Iraqis. That’s disgusting, not some stupid advertisement for an infantile game.

  • You complain about someone using a soldier’s photograph to advertise a game where people pretend to kill someone but say nothing about those same soldiers killing real people in the real world. Let’s not forget that the American state has – over the last two decades – killed hundreds of thousands – quite possibly millions – of Iraqis. That’s disgusting, not some stupid advertisement for an infantile game.

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