As many of you know, OnLiveFans.com has been around for just about as long as the OnLive service has been. This week has been a rough one for many of us including me. As the lead editor of OnLiveFans’ News site, I was incredibly shocked by all of the rumors swirling around starting on Friday afternoon. Unfortunately I was out of town the entire weekend with limited access to a computer. This kept a lot of information that was provided to OLF from being posted (merely from the fact that I was who was being contacted). I apologize for this.
Last night Jane Anderson, who works in the PR department for OnLive contacted us, saying, “Steve (Perlman) and Gary (Lauder) wanted us (OnLive) to communicate the following message to the OnLive Fans community.”
We take a walk around the Cloud Gaming Graveyard - listing all the failed cloud gaming services over the last decade.
We discuss the ups, the downs, and overall history of this technology. Turns out running a successful cloud gaming service that addresses the various technical hurdles and actually makes money is a real challenge.
DS:
Sometimes life just isn't fair. Vincent Van Gogh went completely unappreciated during his lifetime despite his obvious genius; Jesus - a man who could turn water into wine, don't forget - was nailed to a cross and left for dead; while Steve Brookstein has only ever had one number one single, despite winning the very first series of The X Factor. Now what's that about?
the dreamcast was not amazing:
-It's graphics were in between ps1 and ps2
-the controller felt so narrow and skinny
-no dvd drive
I don't know why people act like it was anything more than another overrated undersold flop of a console. My friend had one because "next gen" and I told him I'm just waiting for PS2.
He always talked about graphics, non stop. Of course when I played it did look better than anything I've seen before, but that was it. The games were ok at best. I didn't like NFL 2K's control scheme compared to Madden's.
Even as a kid I predicted this console would die off in 2 years, well what happened...
Failure is always relative. How many sales makes something successful? "If your not first, your last", or in this case, you failed. I'll admit, I've never heard of a couple of these.
GameCube made the most profit in its generation. I don't consider that console a flop.
I consider a flop to be a product that has a negative impact financially for a company.
OnLive announced that they would be shutting down their streaming service for good at the end of this month, which has unsurprisingly upset some of the streaming service’s supporters. While some took to griping on forums, OnLive user Larry Gadea decided to take action.
That's very reassuring and I hope they're able to bounce back from this. Reaching out and specifically writing a letter addressed to the fans is an awesome thing for them to do. I love the OnLive service; I've invested hundreds of hours into it and don't plan on stopping!