Comcast Tries Online Game Subscription Route
WebGangsta writes "Comcast announced a new gaming service available to anyone: for a monthly fee of $14.95, subscribers will have unlimited access to more than 60 PC-based games, from mainstream titles to educational software. New titles will be added each month. Games referenced in the press release included Atari's Dead Man's Hand [plus other largely Atari titles from the recently launched, similar Atari On Demand, including Neverwinter Nights and Civilization III: Conquests]. Is this one of the revenue streams Comcast was thinking about developing when they combined G4 with TechTV? Is there really a market for pay-service video games, and was there a lesson to be learned from Sega's attempt at this market (which was priced $2 less just nine years ago)?" Update: 06/02 17:06 GMT by S : Commenters point out Yahoo! is offering a similar service, currently with a greater variety of games.
My first thought, too. But a cable company doing it (as opposed to, say, an investment scammer) strikes me as a "good-fit" idea.
Steam works and although I had my reservations about it originally, I kinda love it. I like not having to d/l the latest HL and CS patches to play, and it's great now that they've worked out most of the bugs in the integrated IM/matching client. If this service becomes anything like it, AND they have a software base which is worth buying... they can consider me as another customer.
-Christopher Wu
http://www.christopherwu.net/
I think $14.95 to download PC games isn't a bad idea... A better idea is to have the new set-top boxes (which have integrated HD and Tivo-like PVR options) also include, say, a cheap PC. Then you can have a wireless game controller and/or keyboard and mouse and play on your TV. The benefits are of course that the hardware requirements aren't insane. Graphics are gonna run, max, at 1024 x 768 (they could run at 640x480 or less in a non-HD TV)*, so you don't need a super-powerful nVidia SupraGammadeon 85000 (an MX runs, what? $55?). The processor is also ultra-cheap, because you don't "need" the new P7. Hard drive doesn't need to be more than 20GB. With some work, this could be a Phantom-style device. Except it has an installed user-base and it's, oh yeah, a real product. Cost of the device is probably an extra $200-300. You can slash that by making it a PC from one or two years ago and getting older PC games to work with it. You know, UT, Quake 2, Half-Life, etc. Or offer two choices, one that's $14.95/m with free rental and plays games with sys requirements that were average in 2001, and one super-fancy one that can play all the newest games, with a higher cost.
Would I pay an extra $9.95-14.95 to be able to play a library of games from 1995-2002 (or newer, less process-intense ones?). Hell yeah. Just have it be on my TV, not my PC. I spend enough time in front of it as it is.
Bring it on.
Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.