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Valve Games May Be Coming to OnLive

by - source: CVG

Thanks to the mobile showing at E3, Valve Software may be bringing Portal and other titles to OnLive in order to reach mobile games.

Duke Nukem Forever on OnLiveWhile some of us are big fans of streaming game service OnLive, we sometimes scratch our heads wondering what kind of impact this new technology will have on hardware manufacturers like Nvidia, Intel and AMD in the near future. After all, streaming HD gaming content to a low-end laptop – not to mention tablets and smartphones for that matter – seems like a viable threat to said parties.

Likewise, OnLive would also seemingly be a tough competitor to the likes of GamersGate and Valve Software's highly-popular Steam platform. But according to OnLive VP of Engineering Joe Bentley, Valve's Gabe Newell actually digs the new game streaming service, and he even claims to be frineds with the Valve bossman.

"Gabe and his team really like what we're doing," Bentley claims. "I can't go into specifics of any conversations we've had but we have had conversations with everybody in the industry. They really dig OnLive. Gabe is a funny guy because he's really not competitive - very similar to Randy [Pitchford]. He sees us a complementary in a lot of different ways."

Complimentary is actually a great description. Publishers see OnLive as a potential platform to reach customers who otherwise wouldn't have purchased titles based on hardware requirements, or because they don't own or want to purchase a console. OnLive consumers aren't even required to shell out $10 per month for the all-you-can-play subscription; there are options to rent and "purchase" games outright.

Bentley said that Steam really isn't a competitor because Valve's "heart" is into making games – games that could potentially land on OnLive in the future. "If you get to know Valve as a company, Steam was something that they just had to do because nobody else was handling a decent digital distribution model," he said. "Gabe and his team's hearts are really in making games like Portal 2 and so forth. If you see where Portal 2 is, it's on every other platform."

"If Gabe was so intent on Steam's dominance he would make it exclusive on Steam, but that's not what he is," he added . "He's about making the best quality games out there. He's really fascinated with our features and given us a lot of suggestions, they've got similar features coming out and we've chatted about really innovative ideas. I regard him and the company as friends. Sure we're going to have other people doing similar things, but the industry is big enough. We're only a 200 person start-up, we don't need to own it all, there's something for everybody."

But here's the kicker, leading us to believe that Valve may cave in and bring its games to the OnLive platform or something similar. "For me, Steam can't really take their game to that mobile level... Gabe [Newell] walks around with his iPad so he sees OnLive and maybe thinks about how he can get Portal out to the world to the mobile market without compromises."

Ka-bam!

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HEXiT 21/06/2011 03:00
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onlive is a joke. if valve support it they are cutting off there own nose....
the worst thing about it is you will never have your own copy of a game so even if you want to play a single mission you will have to pay, and keep paying.
if this kind of service is ment to be the future of gaming then gaming is doomed.

any 1 found playing on onlive should be ostracized from the gaming community as they are just feeding the fatcats who prefer to give as little as they can get away with and overcharge while doing it. thus diminish the value of good gaming.
this kind of capitalism is the worst kind. it does not want innovation it wants to dumb down to the lowest common denominator pretty much what has happened with consoles and there 1,2,3,4,5 versions of the same game...
the sadest thing is it may actualy catch on, again through the console gamers, as the companies know no matter how badly they treat them they will still buy there product and even say thankyou... even after they have sent it back for the 7th time to get repaired... if they can get away with that, they can get away with anything.

technogiant 21/06/2011 10:51
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I believe you can also buy a game outright with the onlive service.....so you don't have to pay each time you play.

As regards hardware Mfrs being hit....err who do you think makes the hardware for the cloud service it runs on?

I love the idea of the Onlive model and think that a hybrid of a Steam type digital download service and Onlive streaming service is the future of gaming.

Consoles are going to die, they are going to be progressively pushed out firstly by AMD's APU's and similar architectures that bring gaming capable devices to the masses, and secondly by these streaming services which basically make any device that can accept a video stream gaming capable.

So we are going to see an end of the console / pc gaming split....consoles won't exist

Further more the use of cloud computing to deliver gaming content will cause further unification. The cloud computing providers are not going to wish to replace their hardware all the time for every hardware development....so gaming will move away from dedicated hardware perhaps back to a software rendering approach which would allow them to just expand their servers when more power was needed rather than throw it out and start again because of dedicated hardware generational changes.

Although dedicated hardware is obviously more efficient, the need for graphical improvement is going to plateau out over the next few years and a software approach will be able to meet the needs to the extent that can be appreciated by the human eye.



Rab1d-BDGR 21/06/2011 14:32
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@HEXiT - I could not agree more!

I'm sure Valve don't see Onlive as competition at all - if it looks like OnLive is a viable business then I bet Valve would be one of the companies queueing up to buy them.

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