Techrecipe

Facebook also entered the cloud game market

Facebook announced the launch of a beta cloud game service for Android and PC. Games will be added from time to time, and it is said to be officially launched in 2021.

Facebook is active in the game business by releasing instant games that allow you to enjoy 1,000 types of games within the platform and Facebook gaming, a live game broadcast platform, as a dedicated app. Cloud game services that can play AAA-class game titles on laptops, tablets, and smartphones without a game console and high-performance PC are supported by various companies such as Google Stadia, Amazon Luna, and NVIDIA GeForce Now. Situation presented. In addition, Facebook, which has the world’s largest SNS with 2.7 billion monthly active users, has also entered.

Facebook cloud game services include Asphalt 9: Legends, Mobile Legends: Adventure, PGA TOUR Golf Shootout, Solitaire: Arthur’s Tale TriPeaks, Starting with Android APK format smartphone games such as WWE Supercard and Dirt Bike Unchained, we plan to expand the type, number, and genre of games by testing little by little. In the end, Facebook said that because it is a cloud game service, gamers are worried about some flaws in games where delays are allowed, and that they will release games with little effect on delays in the beginning.

In addition, it is linked with Facebook, a real-name SNS, but in the cloud game service, everyone uses the player and avatar, not their real name. Cross-play that is not limited to platforms such as smartphones and PCs will also be implemented. In addition, it is explained that game advertisements supporting cloud gaming will evolve into interactive functions through HTML5 and cloud services, which will blur the boundary between games and advertisements.

Jason Rubin, vice president of Facebook play, said that the announcement about cloud games is an addictive trend.

The first is that there will be no excessive promises or insufficient performance. Facebook believes in the long-term future of cloud games, but said it will not surprise users with data centers, compression algorithms, resolutions, frames per second, etc. It is important to accept all of the reality.

Second, there is no intention of replacing the game console that users like. The popularity of home and PC games will continue for a long time to come, and Facebook says cloud games aren’t a replacement, but an alternative to great games.

Third is that Facebook will expand its scope from where it is possible. As it aims to expand the types of games already offered in cloud games, we first start a free game so that users can enjoy it on Facebook. This is also one of the reasons Facebook started as a game played on mobile devices. In the future, if we improve our systems and infrastructure, we will be able to provide more types of games. Until then, cloud games cost $0, so you can rest assured.

Fourth, it will not launch a cloud game service separate from Facebook. All cloud game titles can be played in the same way as playing games on Facebook. It does not require any special hardware or controller, and you can enjoy the game using a mouse and keyboard on a desktop PC. More than 380 million people play games every month on Facebook, and cloud games will function just like instant games with HTML5.

Fifth, it is not yet planned for iOS at this time. We didn’t release cloud games on iOS and are considering alternative options for iOS, but at this time only Android and PC gamers can play integrated cloud games on Facebook. It is not known whether the app store will be able to release cloud game apps under Apple’s new cloud game policy. A web browser could be one of the options, he added, but there are limitations to what Safari offers.

The Facebook cloud game service is first provided in California, Texas, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, and plans to expand the service area in the coming months. Related information can be found here .

lswcap

lswcap

Through the monthly AHC PC and HowPC magazine era, he has watched 'technology age' in online IT media such as ZDNet, electronic newspaper Internet manager, editor of Consumer Journal Ivers, TechHolic publisher, and editor of Venture Square. I am curious about this market that is still full of vitality.

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