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Tuesday, Mar 24, 2009

The GDC always throws up the odd surprise but todays accouncement could be perhaps the biggest the event has ever had, Onlive and the potential of stream based gaming.It is being firstdemo-ed at this years GDC, Onlive represents a type of gaming revolutionwhere players would never need hardware upgrades or most devestatingly to purchase new consoles ever again.

Brainchild of Mike McGarvey (of WebTV and Eidos fame), the service can stream games to a desktop, entry level laptop and even a TV as all the calculations and gaming grunt are allbeing performed server side - by what could only be described as one behemoth of a gaming setup. All gamers have to dois purchase a device which records inputs and sends a signal to the server in Gaming HQ where the individual in turnrecieves a video of what he has just performed in game. As long as individuals have network speeds of 1.5mb and over the service is claimed to be stable and can operate at tolerable latency speeds (under 75ms)which is a must any competitive online games.

Obviously the level of scepticism is through the roof at the moment which can only be matched by the amount of excitement surrounding this device, which could be out as early as this winter. Games from EA, Take-Two, Ubisoft, Epic, Atari, Codemasters, Warner Bros. and Eidos will be avaliable on the service which include titles such as Crysis, Grand Theft Auto 4 and Burnout Paradise. Nothing has been confirmed regarding pricing for both the necessary hardware and online game service with the elimation of piracy from the service I would think many publishers would be suprisingly mercyiful with their pricing structure.

If - and its a big if- Onlive does become even an understated sucess it sends a huge message to everyone involved in the sale of games and hardware, not so much the publishers but the manufacturers and retailers who have made interactive software central to their business model. Most publishers view the online distribution model as benificial to the traditional methods of physical media and retail and the if adoption rates of Onlive were high enough it wouldn't be too long before it become the primary method of distrubution. But there is also other factors which Onlive would be solved, theold conundrum of second hand games being sold at retail would also go away, as well as the ever present problemof piracy which causes the industry to losemillions (perhaps billions?) each year. Let alone the consumer implications with most gamers already using 2-5mb setups already in their homeswhich arealsogetting pretty sick of shelling out on new hardware every three to four years on new consoles.

Its all very pie in the sky at the moment isn't it folks, and I have to admit perhaps my own excitement for this new device has got the best of me but the implications(you have to admit) are pretty radical for the industry even if its a moderate sucess. But perhaps what will be the most interesting for us gamers is tosee how Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo react to this news will they acknowledge its existance or merely put their PR into overdrive and talk about what a inferior product the Onlive may be on release. Who knows at this point but I suppose whatever happens it sure will be interesting over the coming weeks and months, especially with E3 round the corner.

Posted by Gribb85, 3:48pm
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Of course we'd still need hardware upgrades. Standards change.
Posted Mar 25, 2009 4:10 am PT
RK- I think you would if you are downloading the games to your PC but with that sky box like thing your just recieving the content which is played on a master server. So basically you are playing the game on a system over the phone line (so think of it as the controller is pluged into a telephone line to the PC at their end and that is the system your playing it on). I do think they would release new variations like one with a new controller type.

I am really interested to see where this goes as I actually like the sound of it, just as long as my 4 meg broadband is up to the task.
Posted Mar 25, 2009 4:37 am PT
No Achievements = FAIL
Posted Mar 25, 2009 5:01 am PT
Garfield - Finland for instance made the jump from analog to digital TV transmissions a while ago. That of course meant that every either had to buy a new TV or a digital receiver. And before long, everyone will need a new receiver for HD picture and after HD, another new technology will come out and we'll need another hardware upgrade.
Posted Mar 25, 2009 6:30 am PT
Rk- true but standard definition lasted how many years and high definition has just started. Its early in shelf life and not fully developed for (yes we have HD films etc but we will have a wait for blu rays to be a fiver and the next disk or download format). This is not one you upgrade yet, there will be variations but its not hardware inside it, you are connecting up to it online as they have the PC's and hardware that needs changing. Yes a new box may come in time but as they said its cheap, its not like "oh I need a new CPU next year again" as thats their worry, not the subscribers. Of course it will affect rental and purchase prices of the games but its an interesting system.
Posted Mar 25, 2009 8:16 am PT
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  • Gribb85
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