the_dengle said:
PC operating systems are more and more being modeled after their mobile couterparts. Within a decade, I don't doubt all operating systems will be unified (Windows PC will use the same OS as Windows phone, OS X successor will be identical to iOS successor, etc.). This means that no matter what device they are developing games for, all video game developers are using mobile operating systems and their games will be playable on mobile. There may be some companies who resist this movement, continuing to ignore the "mobile market" (a meaningless phrase referring to an imaginary demographic at this hypothetical future point in time) and developing games without mobile play in mind at all. But most major publishers will be developing games with mobile play in the forefront, because all devices will functionally be mobile devices. This future is not unavoidable. But it is realistic, unlike "Microsoft buys every video game company" or "all major game publishers decide to stop making games simultaneously for no reason." Ask yourself, in the absence of a dedicated-gaming-hardware oriented market, where all video games are playable on mobile devices, what kind of games will EA, Activision, Ubisoft, Square Enix, and Capcom publish? Look at their mobile offerings now. Are these mistakes from which they will learn, or are they a sign of things to come? What if Final Fantasy XVII is All The Bravest? What if Capcom's vision for the future of Mega Man is XOver? What if EA does to Battlefield, Mass Effect, and the EA Sports line what they have already done to The Sims and Sim City? Hang on, too late. I don't trust these publishers with a mobile future. In this future, dedicated console-like video games are truly niche. This future is neither inevitable nor imminent, but it is a possibility, and things are already being nudged in this direction. "[Microsoft] doesn't care what you do, as long as you do it on their operating system." Reggie Fils-Aime said this in 2004, and it carries more truth now than ever before. I guess this isn't really a "crash" scenario, but it seems to fit the OP's suggestion of a console-esque-gaming apocalypse. |
We already know third party publishers practices to get money. Are you saying, in this hypothetical future, third parties will become satisfied with their current offerings for smart devices and completely ignore the chance to make games core gamers will want to play. Yes there are the desperate ones will settle for the subpar Dead Space app on iOS, but they're not coming back for Dead Space 2 on iOS and Android. Especially if another company makes a better game that requires an add-on to your smart device or a home dock with a controller.
There will be a company who will take the opportunity to release a subscription service like Netflix but with games for core gamers. If EA and others don't want to support it, other gaming publishers will and earn the core gamers' money. You may think these profits are small because of the shrinking console game sales compared to mobile gaming is and that's correct. However, if smart devices become the dominant multimedia device in every market (PC, laptop, MP3s and more) more electronics will be produced to support it. Just like how the TV replaced the radio and we got video players and video game consoles! We're already seeing how popular smart device covers, chromecast, and bluetooth magnetic keyboards are. Why can't video game controller add-ons and a home dock to stream content from your smart device to the TV be popular? A home dock and a tiny magnetic keyboard/game controller for your smart phone can provide a physical controller or buttons to your smart device for core gaming again. And I bet the audience will even grow when games like Angry Birds and Call of Duty are on the same platform, making adoption to bigger games more seamless.







