Players only - Season 2 - Episode 1
Lorne is featured in the first episode entitled Video Games Are Dead – Part 1
Summary: Freefalling sales. Skyrocketing unemployment. Studios tanking left and right. Between the twin pressures of one of the worst recessions in modern history and a fundamental shift in the way today’s fans consume interactive entertainment, the PC and video game business is quickly coming up short on extra lives. As Season 2 of Players Only opens, we connect with the industry’s biggest names to cast aside the field’s “recession-proof” image and explore how the very fabric of gaming as we know it has changed. Tune in for the first of a special two-part series as we ask: Is it ‘game over’ for thousands of developers and publishers – and millions of fans – worldwide? http://media.digitaltrends.com/playe...e-dead-part-1/ |
Interesting clip. Good find.
I do think that the gaming industry is going to be making a massive change in a few years. Mostly because, like with everything, there is a current generation of game developers that will eventually be replaced. The great minds of the past 10 years will eventually go away and what we get back might be better or might be worse, who knows. As for the delivery of games, I don't think boxed games are going to disappear within 5 years, as Lorne puts it. Downloading a 8 gig game is just not feasable at this point in time. Internet connections are just now coming around to 100 mbp/s for home connections and that's not even the standard, those type of connections are reserved for the elite with lots o money. 5 years is a little soon but I'm sure it will happen eventually. |
Awesome find.
I've only recently started to get involved into the business side of being a indie developer. I've been reading everything I can find about retail, digital distribution, marketing, etc. I still got a while till I'm getting my games out there, but when I do I'll definitely try for Steam and any other digital distribution service I stumble across. So much competition out there, but with enough awareness and good quality I think any game can make it. |
Honestly, this is getting ridiculous.
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Feh.
Screw the credit-crunch. People aren't buying games because new games are crap. When a fantastic, amazing game comes out, screw eating. I WANNA PLAY! |
Video games are dead? Of course Lorne would be apart of this. no negrepping for the spelling of course
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Why are people still asking Lorne for his opinion on the industry even though he hasn't done much in ages. STOP DISTRACTING HIM!
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I think big downloads are certainly feasible. It may bug people that they buy the game and can't play it RIGHT AWAY, which might put off twitchy adrenaline junkie gamers. But most normal people would be fine with it. |
I'm not sure my internet provider lets me download several games a month though, I have a limited quota. That could be a major problem in some countries.
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I some how manged to pis off my mum by going over or 12 gig download limit. 6 steam games in a month. God I waste my money.
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it may be right for states or europe but it'd not work in russia and east, i can tell you. of course, we're downloading ISOs and other things, but streaming games - nope, it's not gonna working here, fellas. lots of russian gamers still playing home without internet, no matter if it is console or pc.
personally, i'm playing only on psp (right now it's Abe's Exoddus), 'cause i don't much time on it - work, education and good old nap. |
Personly i think Steam is the future of Video games. It is a amazing idea, sort of like iTunes only for Games. Brillent!
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The post-WW2 wastelands of Europe are a different world to the Promised Land of the New World. Some islands of Britain only recently connected to the electrical grid.
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Gosh. Poor bastards.
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The games on Steam aren't all that big YET. But when I downloaded L4D and TF2 I know I was getting a bit annoyed at having to wait for it. |
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Also, in Australia at least, games are much cheaper on Steam than in the stores. There really is only one or two companies selling games and they add on a huge markup. |