- Microsoft dropped several details about Project xCloud – its cloud gaming service – at E3 2019. However, unlike Google Stadia, Microsoft left out the pricing of its upcoming cloud gaming service.
- From the details provided, we know Xbox console owners will be able to use their console to stream their entire collection of Xbox games for free
Head of Gaming Phil Spencer wants to use Microsoft’s cloud gaming service to reach more gamers in India and Africa.
Microsoft dropped several details about Project xCloud – its cloud gaming service – at E3 2019. However, unlike Google Stadia, Microsoft left out the pricing of its upcoming cloud gaming service.
From the details provided, we know Xbox console owners will be able to use their console to stream their entire collection of Xbox games for free.
However, Microsoft’s ambitions for xCloud don’t stop there. The company wants to use Project xCloud to broaden the total addressable market.
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Spencer reportedly wants to use xCloud to reach people around the world, particularly in Asian and African countries, where access to consoles is limited, and Android is the primary means of gaming.
Spencer believes xCloud can be used as a platform to vastly increase the reach of Xbox games in these nations.
Speaking to GamesIndustry at E3 2019, Microsoft’s Head of Gaming Phil Spencer mentioned; “Last month, Catherine and I were in Africa. Not a lot of Xboxes in Africa. Not a lot of game consoles. 1.2 billion people on the continent of Africa. Average age is 19 on the continent. They know Fortnite, they know Halo, they know Gears of War. They just don’t have a device.” Catherine Gluckstein is the chief of staff/strategy for Xbox.
Apart from engineering consoles, Microsoft also develops games for those consoles. Despite being a one-time sale for Microsoft, a console is a three to four-year investment for a gamer.
Microsoft relies on games to provide revenue after the sale of the console. Microsoft’s objective is getting Xbox games into the hands as many people as possible. Whether that person games on a PC, console or smartphone seems irrelevant for the company.
A strategy that really does make a lot of sense. Take, for example, India, where tens of millions of people play PUBG Mobile on their handsets. That’s a huge market with great potential for growth. As of now, one of the biggest hurdles that stand in Microsoft’s way is “connectivity”.
Date: June 26, 2019
Source: Money Control