Project XCloud (Microsoft's new game streaming service)

#1

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#1
Very interesting. We'll see how well it performs.

The future of gaming is a world where you are empowered to play the games you want, with the people you want, whenever you want, wherever you are, and on any device of your choosing. Our vision for the evolution of gaming is similar to music and movies — entertainment should be available on demand and accessible from any screen. Today, I’m excited to share with you one of our key projects that will take us on an accelerated journey to that future world: Project xCloud.

Today, the games you play are very much dictated by the device you are using. Project xCloud’s state-of-the-art global game-streaming technology will offer you the freedom to play on the device you want without being locked to a particular device, empowering YOU, the gamers, to be at the center of your gaming experience.

Content and community

Ultimately, Project xCloud is about providing gamers — whether they prefer console or PC — new choices in when and where they play, while giving mobile-only players access to worlds, characters and immersive stories they haven’t been able to experience before.

To realize this vision, we know we must make it easy for developers to bring their content to Project xCloud. Developers of the more than 3,000 games available on Xbox One today, and those building the thousands that are coming in the future, will be able to deploy and dramatically scale access to their games across all devices on Project xCloud with no additional work.

About Project xCloud

Scaling and building out Project xCloud is a multi-year journey for us. We’ll begin public trials in 2019 so we can learn and scale with different volumes and locations. Our focus is on delivering an amazing added experience to existing Xbox players and on empowering developers to scale to hundreds of millions of new players across devices. Our goal with Project xCloud is to deliver a quality experience for all gamers on all devices that’s consistent with the speed and high-fidelity gamers experience and expect on their PCs and consoles.

We’ve enabled compatibility with existing and future Xbox games by building out custom hardware for our datacenters that leverages our years of console and platform experience. We’ve architected a new customizable blade that can host the component parts of multiple Xbox One consoles, as well as the associated infrastructure supporting it. We will scale those custom blades in datacenters across Azure regions over time.



We are testing Project xCloud today. The test runs on devices (mobile phones, tablets) paired with an Xbox Wireless Controller through Bluetooth, and it is also playable using touch input. The immersive nature of console and PC games often requires controls that are mapped to multiple keys, buttons, sticks and triggers. We are developing a new, game-specific touch input overlay that provides maximum response in a minimal footprint for players who choose to play without a controller.


Cloud game-streaming is a multi-faceted, complex challenge. Unlike other forms of digital entertainment, games are interactive experiences that dynamically change based on player input. Delivering a high-quality experience across a variety of devices must account for different obstacles, such as low-latency video streamed remotely, and support a large, multi-user network. In addition to solving latency, other important considerations are supporting the graphical fidelity and framerates that preserve the artist’s original intentions, and the type of input a player has available.

Microsoft — with our nearly 40 years of gaming experience starting with PC, as well as our breadth and depth of capabilities from software to hardware and deep experience of being a platform company — is well equipped to address the complex challenge of cloud game-streaming. With datacenters in 54 Azure regions and services available in 140 countries, Azure has the scale to deliver a great gaming experience for players worldwide, regardless of their location.


Developers and researchers at Microsoft Research are creating ways to combat latency through advances in networking topology, and video encoding and decoding. Project xCloud will have the capability to make game streaming possible on 4G networks and will dynamically scale to push against the outer limits of what’s possible on 5G networks as they roll out globally. Currently, the test experience is running at 10 megabits per second. Our goal is to deliver high-quality experiences at the lowest possible bitrate that work across the widest possible networks, taking into consideration the uniqueness of every device and network.

We are looking forward to learning with you during our public trials next year and sharing more details as we continue on this journey to the future of gaming with you at the center. Stay tuned!
 
#3
#3
This really could change everything. It's a gamble, but if Microsoft pulls this off, they'll be setting the future direction of gaming.
 
#4
#4
I can't ever see myself embracing video game streaming 100%. If they stop offering gaming in the traditional sense I'll probably bow out. However as long as streaming remains optional I'm good with it. It would actually be a nice way of testing games out before you buy. Kind of like your own personal "Red Box." Stream the game to see if you like it and if you do you can purchase it out right digitally or physically. Having it on the go would be cool, though there's no way in hell I'll play console type games on an iPad or phone without a physical controller.
 
#5
#5
I can't ever see myself embracing video game streaming 100%. If they stop offering gaming in the traditional sense I'll probably bow out. However as long as streaming remains optional I'm good with it. It would actually be a nice way of testing games out before you buy. Kind of like your own personal "Red Box." Stream the game to see if you like it and if you do you can purchase it out right digitally or physically. Having it on the go would be cool, though there's no way in hell I'll play console type games on an iPad or phone without a physical controller.

You seem really against streaming. Why do you care where the game is processed? If the technology works as well as it's supposed to, why does it matter that it's streaming? If streaming actually does get good enough to offer a near lag free experience, you'll be spending less and getting a lot more. Instead of you buying hardware to upgrade graphics and processing power every few years with a new console, let the devs add more hardware on their side.

Google is close. They've got new AAA games running in Chrome at 1080p/60fps. It's not going to be immediately available to everyone but 5G is just around the corner and internet speeds are just getting better and better.
 
#6
#6
I can't ever see myself embracing video game streaming 100%. If they stop offering gaming in the traditional sense I'll probably bow out. However as long as streaming remains optional I'm good with it. It would actually be a nice way of testing games out before you buy. Kind of like your own personal "Red Box." Stream the game to see if you like it and if you do you can purchase it out right digitally or physically. Having it on the go would be cool, though there's no way in hell I'll play console type games on an iPad or phone without a physical controller.
I'm sure some folks said the same thing about music...and movies...and tv. Honestly, I think streaming of content is the inevitable future, whether you like it or not. It's a natural extension of the digital sales model, as the technology continues to improve. Resellers and renters, like Gamestop, are going to go the way of Blockbuster. I'm already on board with Xbox Gamepass. Great offerings with a low monthly service fee. Last hard copy of a game I bought was over 2 years ago.
 
#7
#7
Being age 42 I can honestly say technology is moving really fast now.

I remember jumping from EGA to super VGA thinking we had arrived.

And when I first logged onto Prodigy with my dial up modem I really thought we were cooking with oil.

Man those were the old days.

Carrying my entire PC with its vacuums to my friends house so we could have a command and conquer LAN party.
 
#8
#8
Being age 42 I can honestly say technology is moving really fast now.

I remember jumping from EGA to super VGA thinking we had arrived.

And when I first logged onto Prodigy with my dial up modem I really thought we were cooking with oil.

Man those were the old days.

Carrying my entire PC with its vacuums to my friends house so we could have a command and conquer LAN party.
I was an OG Prodigy user. One of my buddies still has his address. Wish I'd kept mine, lol! I built my first rig in 1990: a 386 with 1.6 MB of RAM and a 40 MB HDD! Now, my phone puts that to shame.
 
#9
#9
I remember paying $50 a meg for RAM back around '92. Bought 4 megs and thought I was living right. Dad was jealous 2 years later when I sprung for a new 1gig harddrive. How would I ever fill up a gig? This will last me until I die. Used to love getting a new Computer Shopper magazine back then and looking at all the new stuff.
 
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