A handwritten note from Steve Jobs has fetched $175,759 at auction.
08.08.2023 - 17:15 / techcrunch.com
After last fall signaling its intentions to expand into cloud gaming, Netflix today launched a new app that will soon allow subscribers to play games on their TV. The app, dubbed “Netflix Game Controller,” lets you use your phone as a controller after pairing it with your TV in order to play the games available through Netflix’s service.
Though the game has appeared in the App Store, there’s no news yet on which of Netflix’s games will be making their way to the big screen or when. Instead, the app’s description simply teases: “Coming soon to Netflix.”
Reached for comment, Netflix declined to share additional details about its plans or timeline.
Image Credits: Netflix’s new app on the App Store
However, Netflix has already gone on the record about its plans to expand beyond mobile gaming.
In October 2022, Netflix VP of Gaming Mike Verdu told the audience at our TechCrunch Disrupt event that Netflix was “exploring a cloud gaming offering.” He also noted the company would open a new gaming studio in Southern California, led by Chacko Sonny, the former executive producer on “Overwatch” at Blizzard Entertainment.
The exec clarified he didn’t see Netflix competing in the same space as PlayStation or Xbox, however.
“It’s a value add. We’re not asking you to subscribe as a console replacement,” Verdu said at the time. “It’s a completely different business model. The hope is over time that it just becomes this very natural way to play games wherever you are.”
While other cloud gaming services have failed, like Google’s Stadia, Netflix believes the issues were around the business models, not the technology. Verdu remarked that Stadia’s games were fun to play, but the business itself was not sustainable.
Netflix, on the other hand, bundles free games into the cost of its streaming subscription.
As Netflix continued to roll out more games to its service, Netflix’s VP of external games Leanne Loombe this Maytouted Netflix’s cloud gaming ambitions, saying “We do believe that cloud gaming will enable us to provide that easy access to games on any screen. Our overall vision is that our members can play games on any Netflix device they have,” — a statement that would clearly include users’ TVs.
The streamer also said around the same time that it had 40 games slated for launch this year as well as 16 being developed in its in-house studios plus 70 more in development with its partners. Since Netflix expanded into gaming in November 2021, it has released north of 50 titles.
Netflix was spotted developing an iPhone-based game controller this March.
Netflix appears to be working to bring games to TV with the iPhone as a controller
The focus on Netflix gaming has been dwindling in recent months, as the market has been more concerned
A handwritten note from Steve Jobs has fetched $175,759 at auction.
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Netflix has launched a cloud gaming service in limited beta form.
Netflix announced today it will begin testing its games across more devices, including TVs and computers, in addition to mobile phones, where its games already run today. The tests will begin today in Canada and the U.K. with a “limited number” of Netflix subscribers who will be given the chance to test games on their TVs. In the coming weeks, those tests will expand to include PCs and Mac computers through Netflix.com via supported browsers.
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