I keep forgetting that Netflix have their own games offering, despite the streaming giant keeping it well stocked with a fairly solid library of free (if you’re a Netflix subscriber anyway) games - including the likes of Oxenfree 2, Kentucky Route Zero and Immortality. If you wanted some more proof that Netflix is pretty serious about this whole “getting into video games” thing, the movie streaming platform-turned-games publisher is now looking to unite their two fronts by experimenting with game streaming.
Netflix’s game streaming will work much like Microsoft’s Xbox Cloud Gaming and Sony’s PlayStation Plus Premium, letting players hop straight into a game running off a remote server somewhere without needing to download it first.
Of course, unlike Xbox and PlayStation, Netflix don’t have a handy game controller they can conveniently repurpose as an easy to play games. Well, they didn’t, anyway, as the company recently launched an iOS app that turns your iPhone into a flat, glossy GameCube-esque controller that can be used with games streamed directly to your TV. I’m sure it controls just fine.
As well as beaming games to a supported TV directly or via something like a Chromecast or Roku, you can fire them up via the Netflix website in a browser on your PC or Mac, using a trusty keyboard and mouse to play. Phew.
Netflix’s current beta test is strictly described as being “limited”, with “a small number of members” in the UK and Canada currently able to try it out via their TVs. PC and Mac support will roll out in the coming weeks, with the beta aimed at making the experience better over time.
The beta test is also limited to just two games: the gem-mining arcade game Molehew’s Mining Adventure (no, I also
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