It's Apple vs Steam Box in the eyes of Valve's co-founder
It's Apple vs Steam Box in the eyes of Valve's co-founder
It's full-steam ahead for Valve's Steam Box console, but the company's transition from the PC room to the living room may find Apple standing in the way of its success.
"The
threat right now is that Apple has gained a huge amount of market
share," said Valve Co-Founder Gabe Newell to a recent University of
Texas' LBJ School of Public Affairs class.
According to the comments picked up by Polygon, the Half-Life 2 developer feels as if "[Apple] has a relatively obvious pathway towards entering the living room with their platform."
Whether it's Apple iTV or
another Trojan Horse video game device, Newell sees a scenario in which
the Cupertino company introduces a "dumbed-down living room platform."
Seeing the 'Big Picture Mode'
Once
again, Apple is seen by a company as a major contender, despite the
fact that it doesn't have any video game hardware in a single gamer's
living room yet.
"I think Apple rolls the console guys really easily," said Newell, backing up the Steam Box's console-killer potential even if we see Xbox 720 andPS4 launch in the next several months.
"The
question is can we make enough progress in the PC space to establish
ourselves there, and also figure out better ways of addressing mobile
before Apple takes over the living room?"
Valve's progress has already begun with the launch of Big Picture Mode(BPM) for its Steam service. BPM optimizes the PC game-running software for the living room.
Likewise,
Steam is already an indie-friendly platform for aspiring video game
developers. This is something Apple has done well, too - albeit with a
$100 (UK£63, AU$95) annual iOS developer program fee.
Steam Box vs. Nvidia Project Shield
Apple
isn't the only competition that Newell sees for Valve's Steam Box. He
specifically names Nvidia as a PC hardware company that's also looking
to gain a living room foothold.
"I
think a whole bunch of hardware companies are going to be releasing
products in the next 12 months," predicted Newell. "You'll hear it
referred to as Miracast, [Project] Shield from Nvidia, or lots of other people."
"There
are going to be a huge set of products that say, 'If you want something
that's incredibly cheap, at a price point well below anything that
consoles will be able to reach, you're going to take advantage of the PC
that's running somewhere in your house.'"
It's
at this point that Newell makes his strongest argument for the Steam
Box being the best grown-up gaming device for the living room.
"[Gamers
will] say, 'Well, I could buy a console, which assumes I'll re-buy all
my content, have a completely different video system, and, Oh, I have a
completely different group of friends, apparently.'
"'Or
I can just extend everything I love about the PC and the internet into
the living room,'" Newell said of a gamers' thought process - making the
choice seem so one-sided and easy.
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