Okay, neither Nintendo nor Sony would
ever do that unless they went Sega-way.
Of course they're going to do a subscription, and he said that in the opening minutes of the video. He says something along the lines of "...the cost of manufacturing the Box is so inexpensive, we can literally give it away if you subscribe to OnLive".
Roughly $10/year seems realistic, which isn't that bad for what you're getting. But still, I don't think it's going to be
that cheap.
They not only need to pay for the bandwidth, server maintenance, constant computer support/maintenance (regular servers don't need all of the fancy gaming gear a gaming PC needs), upgrading said computers to be able to play these games at the highest settings as well as making actual money off the services. That is of course excluding the percent they'd take off the sales of the game.
Pretty sure WoW charges $15/month too.
I see no real reason why Id wouldn't join in on this, other than maybe Zenimax doesn't want to.
However, I highly doubt Blizzard and Valve will. They don't need new distribution methods to sell their games, they are quite literally the Nintendo Wii of PC games.
In addition, it'd be both a conflict of interests and look bad to investors. Blizzard has B.Net, and here's how they describe it:
Q: What is the new Battle.net?
A: The new Battle.net is a full-featured online game service designed specifically around Blizzard Entertainment titles, and will include a complete set of around-the-game features including a state-of-the-art matchmaking system, achievement system, social networking features, structured competitive play options, a marketplace, and much more.
and Valve has Steam. If it were up to Gabe Newell, everyone would have Steam.
I'm going to assume that Modern Warfare 2 is locked into some sort of contract with Steam/Valve, because it's required to play it. I strongly doubt that they, Valve, are going to give that up. They also probably coughed up a massive amount of cash to get that deal.
That was a bad way of putting it, and I was talking about the Game Companies/Publishers, not OnLive itself.
But for one, it's uncharted waters. You're not going to go skinny dipping in it; that's stupid.
It seriously does surprise me that the Sims 3 isn't on there as a launch title. However, I guess hen a
PC game sells 1.4 million in its first week and continues to sell like flies, you don't really need any sort of special distribution methods for it.
It'd be stupid to take them with the utmost priority they give traditional retailers, since there's no proof that this will actually take off like they say it will; now, you see, Valve did it the smart way: take a game that people have been waiting for for almost a decade and make it require your program.
Right-o, except I never said it was mind blowing.