TechGamingCan Netflix really be the “Netflix of gaming” I’ve been asking for?The streaming giant is testing its own cloud gaming platform, but will it ever take off?When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
TechGamingCan Netflix really be the “Netflix of gaming” I’ve been asking for?The streaming giant is testing its own cloud gaming platform, but will it ever take off?When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
The streaming giant is testing its own cloud gaming platform, but will it ever take off?
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Netflix)
(Image credit: Netflix)
There has long been the idea that, one day, a company will come along and offer the “Netflix of gaming” – an all-you-can-eat cloud gaming platform that’s available across every connected device and caters for a much wider audience than conventional consoles and computers.
However, none of them have really been the “Netflixof gaming” for one simple reason: they don’t have the scope or business plan. Xbox comes close, with its 200-plus titles available as part of anXbox Game Pass Ultimatesubscription, but the supported device list is relatively small and it still seems to be pitched as a supplementary service rather than standalone.
My favourite cloud gaming platform at the moment,Antstream Arcade, has a larger games library (more than 1,400) and all for a single subscription fee, but caters for a niche audience of retro gamers so isn’t exactly a mass-market, Netflix-style proposition neither.
Instead, it looks like the “Netflix of gaming” could end up coming from, well, Netflix itself. But even then, there are signs one of thebest video streaming servicesmay never achieve such lofty ambitions.
Netflix tests “Games on TV” service
The company has launched abeta test of a “Games on TV” service– an extension of its mobile games off-shoot that enables users to play titles on their televisions using just a phone as a controller.
The test phase is available for a select few in Canada and the UK, and works on “select TVs”. It uses cloud streaming to feed the video of the games to the set, while the Netflix controller app sends user commands back the other way.
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The app is only available foriOSat present, and only two games are playable as part of the test – Oxenfree and Molehew’s Mining Adventure – but if successful, there are plans to open the service up to a much wider audience and device list. The Netflix Games on TV service will eventually run onAmazon Fire TV, Chromecast, LG and Samsung Smart TVs,Nvidia Shield TV, Roku, and the Walmart ONN streamer. Others will also be added in time.
So, for me, the prospective device lineup definitely ticks one of the boxes required to become the Netflix of games. I’m more worried about the “games” bit.
It’s not exactly clear what or how many games Netflix plans to offer through its cloud streaming platform, nor what types. It currently houses around 70 games on its mobile app, with some based on its own TV shows, plus others through partners and acquired development studios (hence Oxenfree).
They are all mobile titles, however, which seem to more rivalAppleArcade than Xbox Game Pass. And while some are superb games in their own right, they’re not exactly FIFA / EA Sports FC or Call of Duty.
It is my experience that games designed for mobile play primarily work best on, yep, mobile platforms. While, conversely, triple-A console games are better served on as big a screen as possible.
So, if Netflix’s cloud gaming plans are to succeed where others have failed, it really needs to offer the best of both worlds and a wider library of content than, I suspect, it has plans for.
Oh, and don’t get me started on touchscreen controls.
Still, I have been an advocate for other cloud gaming platforms in the past, often forlornly, so will at least give Netflix a chance to become the “Netflix of gaming” we’ve all longed for.
If it doesn’t, maybe I should just accept that no service could or even should be.
“Disney+ of gaming” anyone?
TOPICSnetflixAmazonGoogle
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