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codyogden | 3 years ago
As the cryptkeeper over at Killed by Google, I'm very happy with the outcome for Stadia users (myself included). However, I don't think this will move the needle of Google's 'killer' reputation as much as people think given all the skepticism about how long this product would last in the first place. The "death pool," and the people who voted basically predicted the timeline within a few days[1].
DismantleMars|3 years ago
I'm not sure if their strategy ever changed along the way, but when Stadia was first announced, it was a purely cloud gaming platform where you still needed to buy a license for every game. Not knowing what would happen to my purchased games was the main thing keeping me from trying Stadia - I'd have been happy to use it if it was a Netflix / Xbox Game Pass style service where you pay a flat monthly rate for access to a library, or if it was clear that any games you bought would be refunded if the service suddenly shut down.
As it was though, it seemed as though you could drop a ton of money on Stadia games, and Google might pull the plug the very next day, and you lose everything you just purchased. That worry was the deciding factor for me to never give Stadia a go.
tdeck|3 years ago
redonyo|3 years ago
permo-w|3 years ago
the reason that this time they’ve seemingly turned a new leaf is that this time hardware is involved. once something is in someone’s hands and they actually own it, rather than a legally slippery software license or user agreement, you’re looking at something that can be very easily explained to a judge or jury
unknown|3 years ago
[deleted]
benatkin|3 years ago
Hamuko|3 years ago
They've always been usable as generic USB controllers.