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Wolfire games blog entry about OnLive

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  • Wolfire games blog entry about OnLive

    Clicky.

    It works...
    Well, with some trade-offs (image quality, bandwidth requirements...) but damn!

  • #2
    Ok one thing I wonder:
    You "port" a PC game to OnLive and it gets sold to OnLive clients. However, the OnLive platform runs on Mac OS X and Windows, and soon, independently on your TV. At E3, OnLive demoed it running on the iPad.

    Mac OS X users now get access to a ton of games that they wouldn't have otherwise. If OnLive creates a Linux client, that will be even more dramatic: Linux users who traditionally are lucky to see a AAA title per half decade would suddenly be treated to a buffet of games.
    I wonder how happy microsoft is about the prospect of people playing directx titles without necessarily owning a windows license.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by PsynoKhi0 View Post
      Clicky.

      It works...
      Well, with some trade-offs (image quality, bandwidth requirements...) but damn!
      Too many clickies in your clicky (http is repeated), try :

      Clicky v2.0
      Test signature

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by bridgman View Post
        Too many clickies in your clicky (http is repeated), try :

        Clicky v2.0
        Whoops, overdose of clickiness

        Comment


        • #5
          He glosses over one thing. Something that developers doing games probably wouldn't be familiar with

          At the bandwidth we're talking about, you can't service all that many people.

          6000 simultaneous users without problems- on an OC12 and for 640x480 resolution. Keep repeating that number over and over until it sinks in.

          Nifty idea until you do the math involved with it's use.

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          • #6
            There's something else. The prospect of not having to buy the latest gaming rig is a "Free Lunch". That gaming rig has to be somewhere, and it has to be paid for by someone. And in the end, that someone is always the customer.
            Granted, those servers can be shared, but then there's bandwidth costs and everything, so it won't amount to much.


            Also, someone on a 13ms connection saying "meh, it doesn't lag that bad" is pretty much useless.

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            • #7
              I imagine people would only use OnLive to play games their system is to slow for. Those games are usually shooters. Shooters are played online. With the additional lag of OnLive, you won't win online matches. Games like WarCraft III run everywhere and are cheaper without OnLive, no need for that. And no one will play Crysis on the iPad, because it wasn't designed to be played with multitouch.

              Interesting idea, but I think it'll fail for various reasons.

              Comment


              • #8
                The whole onlive thing reminds me of gamerail. One was supposed to lower latency and the other creates it. If only they came together .

                Comment


                • #9
                  For single-player FPS games it will be alright I guess (and if the servers are directly in the local datacenters of your internet provider, than it will scale without much trouble).
                  And lets face it, there is a huge number of more or less casual gamers who would probably like to play the newest singleplayer FPS games, but don't do it since they didn't buy a gaming rig.

                  So I am pretty sure that unless they do some really stupid marketing, this OnLive will be pretty successful, just not with the "hardcore" gamers (and probably also with the linux enthusiasts).

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                  • #10
                    One thing he fails to mention is the price.

                    $14.95 per month + the price of games which aren't cheap. $60 for 3 years access to Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Conviction.

                    For these sorts of prices you'd get a better quality image, the ability to resell your games or buy second hand and higher reliability by buying a console or with a bit more cash a desktop.

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