Equipment

Put another notch on Google’s axe, Stadia’s switch to a licenced streaming platform is dead too-

When Google shut down underperforming game-streaming service Stadia, the company announced a plan to keep the tech underlying it alive in the form of “Immersive Stream for Games”, which it licenced out so other companies could let their customers play games online. One high-profile result was Resident Evil Village’s demo you could play in a browser, but the same tech was behind AT&T letting subscribers play Batman: Arkham Knight and fitness-bike maker Peloton launching a game called Lanebreak (turns out, virtual cycling games are big business).

In the midst of promoting a bundle of tools Google Cloud offers game publishers to support their live service games, reporter Stephen Totilo mentioned that the Stadia tech is no longer available to license.

“We are not offering that streaming option,” Jack Buser, director of game industry solutions at Google Cloud, told Totilo, “because it was tied to Stadia itself. So, unfortunately, when we decided to not move forward with Stadia, that sort of [business-to-business] offering could no longer be offered as well.”

What Google’s currently pushing to remind everyone it’s committed to being part of the games industry now is a platform called Agones, which was developed in conjunction with Ubisoft. Agones was showcased at the Game Developer’s Conference in 2019, and combines game servers, engine integration, and a suite of metrics and player-monitoring tools. As well as Ubisoft it’s apparently being used by Yager, Niantic, Unity, and other companies looking to get into live service multiplayer games.

Jack Buser, who was formerly the director for games at Stadia before taking his current position at Google Cloud, was quoted as saying, “It was at that moment when we basically had to make decisions about Stadia that we realized that, at Google Cloud, we are at our best when we’re helping other people build this stuff, not necessarily building it ourselves.”

Even as games like Knockout City, Rumbleverse, and Ubisoft’s Hyperscape have had to shut down at most a couple of years after launching and Square Enix announced that Marvel’s Avengers won’t be supported past September, publishers seem determined to blithely continue chasing the service-game gravy train. Assassin’s Creed Infinity will reportedly be turning the series into a live service game that spans multiple historical settings, Blood Bowl 3 has seasonal updates and a battle pass, and Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League looks like it’ll be a looter-shooter with gear scores and cosmetics that are earned via, yes, a battle pass. 

Related Posts

Grab yourself a 256GB Steam Deck for 64GB money with only a teensy bit of tinkering required-

The Steam Deck is on sale over at Valve for the next two weeks. It’s not a paltry amount off, either. There’s 10% off the cheapest model, 15% off the middle-tier model, and 20% off the top tier model. 

The top model, the one with a full 512GB NVMe SSD, is down to less than the regular price of the 256GB model with that 20% discount. So, that’s already a pretty convincing discount if you’ve been waiting to make a decision on whether to buy the handheld or not. 

Though more alluring is the budget model, even with a slimmer 10% discount. One reason why is that, no matter what, the ROG Ally can’t compete with the price tag on the 64GB Steam Deck—it’s just a much cheaper device. 

But, importantly, you don’t have to put up with that small storag…

$999 is a load of money but this uberwide OLED gaming monitor from Samsung is still my Black Friday bargain-

Is there a point at which a gaming monitor gets too big, too unweildy? Maybe, but who cares, just look at this thing, corner-to-corner made of Samsung’s snazzy QD-OLD panel tech, all 49 inches of it. We first clapped our eyes on it in July. Then it was $1,599, now it’s already plummeted to just $999 on Amazon in the run up to Black Friday.

Yep, that’s still a whole lotta money. But it’s remarkable to see a premium mega sized OLED gaming monitor hit this price level so soon after launch. Lest you have forgotten, the Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 G93SC is a 49-inch 32:9 aspect monster sporting QD-OLED tech and a native resolution of 5,120 by 1,440.

It’s an interesting alternative to another massive Samsung beast, the Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 G95NC Dual UHD is even bigger at 57 inches …

RIP Google Stadia, and the exclusives that go with it-

So farewell then, Google Stadia: We barely knew ye. Around ten hours ago Google’s streaming service finally closed after three years. There were props for the way the company handled the shutdown (with all customers receiving refunds and the controller getting a firmware update to enable bluetooth functionality), some unseemly celebrations, but mostly sadness about what developers and players alike would miss.

You never know what you got till it’s gone, I suppose. Stadia’s last week brought one small gaming surprise in the form of the service’s very final released game being its first: a multiplayer version of Snake called Worm Game. That dude who put 6,000 hours into Red Dead Online on Stadia streamed his final journey into the wild west on the service, with Rockstar’s save trans…

The first Diablo 4 player to solo his way to level 100 in Hardcore mode dies in a fight against the game’s toughest boss-

Earlier this week, Wudijo, who found Diablo 4 fame during the beta by soloing the world boss, became the first player to reach level 100 in the game’s Hardcore mode entirely on his own. But glory is short-lived, and so too was Wudijo, who has been killed in a throwdown with the game’s toughest boss.

Wudijo wasn’t the first person to reach Hardcore 100—that honor went to cArn_, who claimed the crown on June 5. But cArn_ did so with a supporting team—Zizaran, Steelmage, and Nugiyen—who helped him push past Wudijo and other players in the final stretch of the race. Wudijo, on the other hand, did the whole thing on his own, so even though he’s not first to reach the top, it is by some measures an even more impressive accomplishment.

Alas, the epic tale has come…

HP gets slapped with yet another lawsuit for blocking printers using anything other than its own inky liquid cash cow-

You might think that Hewlett-Packard’s most important profit generator might be AI servers or cheap laptops, but you’d be wrong. Over half of HP’s annual profits last year were entirely down to its print division, with no small thanks to its Dynamic Security printer firmware upgrade that completely blocked all third-party ink cartridges. Cue yet another round of litigation, in the form of a lawsuit aiming for class action status, claiming HP has created a monopoly on printer ink.

As reported by Ars Technica, the filing is requesting that HP is given an injunction that ultimately requires it to disable Dynamic Security, thus allowing owners to use non-HP replacement ink cartridges. Oh, and the small matter of more than $5 million in damages, and a trial by jury to boot.

This …

ASRock confirms key Intel 14th Gen Raptor Lake refresh details and gives some performance info too-

Intel is putting the finishing touches on its upcoming 14th Gen CPU range. As we draw closer to a launch, it’s not uncommon to get a few leaks including performance estimates, a release date or a new feature. Some leaks are more credible than others, but these come directly from ASRock. So until we come to the launch day and an announcement from Intel, this is about as official as it gets.

Perhaps the most interesting thing from ASRock’s blog post (via IT Home) is a summary of performance estimates. It says it expects single-core performance to improve by 4% to 8% and multi-core performance by 8% to 15%. These estimates are mostly in-line with what we can expect without an architectural change. These increases are going to be due to clock speed and power budget increases, and E co…