The site featured contests, original content, and free web-style games such as blackjack, bingo, and virtual slot machines.
SpeedyClick had a banner ad-style revenue model and also developed custom product placement games for various corporate sponsors.
[2] SpeedyClick succumbed to the dot com bust in a fashion typical to many web-centric companies of their time.
By late 2001, floundering Network Commerce Inc., delisted from NASDAQ and pursued by investors,[3] closed the doors of its various offices, including SpeedyClick.
Its former URL now routes to one of the ubiquitous type-in traffic harvest search pages.