Netflix is beginning to test its cloud gaming servicein the U.S. after initially launching limited trials in Canada and the U.K. The service, an expansion on the company’s mobile gaming efforts which began in 2021, has seen the streamer picking up gaming studios and licensing titles from individual developers with the intention to make gaming another major arm of its business. With its cloud gaming service, Netflix now allows members to play its games on smart TV and TV-connected devices, like Fire TV, Chromecast, Roku, and others, by using their mobile phone as the gaming controller.
The company first signaled its plans to enter the cloud gaming market last fall, when Netflix VP of Games Mike Verdu told the audience at TechCrunch Disrupt that it was exploring such an offering. Explaining where the service fits in the broader gaming market, Verdu had explained Netflix saw gaming as “a value add.”
“We’re not asking you to subscribe as a console replacement,” he said. “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,” Verdu added.
The move pits Netflix up against other cloud gaming services including Microsoft’s Xbox Cloud Gaming, Nvidia GeForce Now, PlayStation Plus, and Amazon Luna. But in Netflix’s case, it’s making its games free with a Netflix subscription, with many of its titles tied to its most popular shows. The Wall St. Journal reported the company is developing games based on shows like “Squid Game,” “Wednesday,” and “Black Mirror,” among others. It has also reportedly discussed plans to release a “Grand Theft Auto” game from Take-Two Interactive through a licensing deal, the report noted.
Already Netflix has released games
Read more on techcrunch.com