Prediction: Google Stadia won't last a year.

IceForce

Is this memes?
Legacy
Dec 11, 2012
2,384
16
13
What you're forgetting is that publishers are going to be pushing HARD for their games to be on this platform (or similar platforms), because of pLaYeR reTeNtiOn and enGagEmeNt, and also because it would drop piracy to basically zero.
 

Chimpzy_v1legacy

Warning! Contains bananas!
Jun 21, 2009
4,789
1
0
Eacaraxe said:
Chimpzy said:
That's stevia. Tho that's known for having an unpleasantly bitter aftertaste, so perhaps not that disimilar.
Pretty sure that's actually ricin, dude.
Nah, if you've put enough ricin in your mouth that you can actually taste it, you are most definitely going to die soon. Because ricin is one of the most potent plant toxins around. It would only take about a milligram in your coffee to kill you.

Whereas stevia is an artificial sweetener that is substantially sweeter than regular sugar, but contains no calories. It's also one of the few sweeteners suitable for consumption by diabetics. Very unlikely to kill you.

One is more likely to be put into coffee than the other. Or confused with the name Stadia.
 

Elfgore

Your friendly local nihilist
Legacy
Dec 6, 2010
5,655
24
13
I'd be fine with needing to purchase the controller and a monthly subscription, so long as I didn't have to buy games. All I can imagine is wanting to listen to an album on Spotify and get asked to drop ten bucks to buy it and listen in addition to my ten dollar a month subscription. I'd be finding an alternative in a week.

Google seems to either give up right before release or only after being bled dry. I see the latter with this one, it'll be Google Plus all over again!
 

RJ 17

The Sound of Silence
Nov 27, 2011
8,687
0
0
Elfgore said:
I'd be fine with needing to purchase the controller and a monthly subscription, so long as I didn't have to buy games. All I can imagine is wanting to listen to an album on Spotify and get asked to drop ten bucks to buy it and listen in addition to my ten dollar a month subscription. I'd be finding an alternative in a week.

Google seems to either give up right before release or only after being bled dry. I see the latter with this one, it'll be Google Plus all over again!
That's the thing. If this was truly a "Netflix of Gaming" - a service where you could play God of War one day then play Gears of War the next all for a simple subscription fee then an argument could easily be made for "eh, it's worth giving a try." You'd be trading stability for convenience: games from all platforms accessible for the price of a controller and a subscription fee. But the fact that you've got to buy each game individually - at full market price, for that matter - just puts this in the realm of "are you fucking kidding me?"

The thing about Google is that employees are given a nice big bonus if they come up with an idea that takes off, yet there's absolutely no detriment to coming up with an idea that completely flops. That is to say that Google employees are fully encouraged to simply throw shit at a wall and see if it sticks.
 

Drathnoxis

Became a mass murderer for your sake
Legacy
Sep 23, 2010
5,468
1,916
118
Just off-screen
Country
Canada
Gender
Male
Isn't that exactly like the last company to attempt the streaming games service who's name I can't remember that ended up failing horribly?
 

Dirty Hipsters

This is how we praise the sun!
Legacy
Feb 7, 2011
7,921
2,282
118
Country
'Merica
Gender
3 children in a trench coat
Drathnoxis said:
Isn't that exactly like the last company to attempt the streaming games service who's name I can't remember that ended up failing horribly?
I believe you're thinking of OnLive.
 

Inazuma1

Professional Asshole
Legacy
Nov 18, 2009
125
28
33
Hell
Meiam said:
but wow, what idiot thought this was a good idea?
Silicon Valley is notoriously out of touch with the rest of the country and subsist on huffing their own farts.

Meiam said:
The article sounded like it was possibly going to become the next big thing, with few mentions of the massive drawback. So google probably has the same problem, there only video game people only cover shitty mobile game and can't understand why stadia will burn.
Economists and tech industry hacks said the same thing about mobile gaming years ago and that Nintendo should stop making handhelds and consoles and just make mobile games if they wanted to survive into the next generation. These same tools were saying mobile was the next big thing that would kill console and PC gaming and possibly cure cancer too. Now mobile is one of the most toxic markets because everything has microtransactions, premium pay versions, and lootboxes. Don't listen to The Economist when they speculate on new trends because they're just lyrically fantasizing and jerking off into your face.
 

Drathnoxis

Became a mass murderer for your sake
Legacy
Sep 23, 2010
5,468
1,916
118
Just off-screen
Country
Canada
Gender
Male
Dirty Hipsters said:
Drathnoxis said:
Isn't that exactly like the last company to attempt the streaming games service who's name I can't remember that ended up failing horribly?
I believe you're thinking of OnLive.
Yeah, I think that's the one.
 

Eacaraxe_v1legacy

New member
Mar 28, 2010
1,028
0
0
RJ 17 said:
The thing about Google is that employees are given a nice big bonus if they come up with an idea that takes off, yet there's absolutely no detriment to coming up with an idea that completely flops. That is to say that Google employees are fully encouraged to simply throw shit at a wall and see if it sticks.
That's not so much a Google problem as it is a FANG/Silicon Valley problem in general; basically any corporation that fetishizes kaizen and has an "innovation uber alles" corporate culture. Google, for as bad as it is, from what I hear is practically a standard-bearer for industry practices compared to other tech giants, particularly Amazon. The elephant in the room is that Amazon's success isn't cultivated through CIP, hell they all but excise the planning phase of the PDCA cycle. Amazon has a ludicrously high failure rate in kaizen projects across the board, I can't remember the numbers off the top of my head but it is astounding; and I don't mean "this project failed to improve KPI's", I mean "this project failed to yield relevant data to shape future projects".

Here's a hint at where it goes really wrong: failure is perceived as a net positive in these companies, particularly when it comes to getting future projects, leverage, and interviewing for internal transfers and promotions. A strong learning experience is prioritized over a weak success story. Ergo, middle-level employees are encouraged to fail, as long as they fail in "the right ways".

The reality is, it's dumb luck in having the occasional major success borne by flinging a tidal wave of shit at the wall. Being too big to fail gives them the leverage to get shoddy with kaizen. Google, on the other hand, is a company where the intent isn't always obvious; see to my earlier example of Nexus and Android. I'd lay cash the intent behind Stadia isn't to produce a successful consumer electronics product.
 

bluegate

Elite Member
Legacy
Dec 28, 2010
2,339
942
118
Adam Jensen said:
The idea is dumber than Google glasses. Remember those?
They were just a couple of years too early, AR glasses are pretty sweet, the technology to make them work comfortable just isn't there yet.
 

Chimpzy_v1legacy

Warning! Contains bananas!
Jun 21, 2009
4,789
1
0
bluegate said:
They were just a couple of years too early, AR glasses are pretty sweet, the technology to make them work comfortable just isn't there yet.
Adam Jensen said:
The idea is dumber than Google glasses. Remember those?
Apparently AR glasses do have their niche within the business market.

Iirc, the enterprise version of Glass got a hardware update announcement less than 2 months ago. Also, the new design looks more like regular glasses, so you look less like a ponce wearing them.