OnLive Lives
I signed up for a free year of OnLive. I received a response email within 24 hours, so I think they just are choosing applicants based on connection speed and location. I've been extremely skeptical of this service, but I can report that it works, and it doesn't suck. I can play UT3 on my netbook. There is some slight lag, but it's not bad. Fast mouse looking can amplify it, so I slowed down my mouse speed to compensate. I had no trouble getting headshots with the sniper rifle, and the gameplay experience was very good. As far as technical performance, OnLive has delivered.
As for the product itself, I don't see any reason to jump onboard yet. Wi-fi connections aren't allowed, so the fun of using my netbook anywhere in the house is mitigated. Without that, there's no reason not to use my desktop PC. The lineup of games is very limited. No Crysis, and it looks like the servers have the games running on low to medium settings. This puzzles me, because the quality settings the servers run with should be trivial. That's the whole point of OnLive. With the games and settings they are offering right now, you could get the same results with a five year old PC.
The pricing model is where OnLive fails. After the first year, you pay $4.95 a month for the service. On top of that, you have to "buy" each game you play, but you don't really own it, and the game may be taken down after 2013. With a revolutionary new delivery system like this, the choice to use an outdated purchasing model is baffling. What if you had to pay a monthly cable TV bill, and then "buy" each show you wanted to enable? It doesn't make sense. OnLive should charge a higher monthly fee, around $29.99-49.99 for access to all games on their servers. OnLive would take their cut of the sale, and the rest would be divided up among the game providers based on the percentage time players spent in their game. This would encourage developers to make games with long-term replay value. It would create a continuous revenue stream for developers, instead of just making money off one-time purchases. It would lessen the complaints people have when an old game if retired off OnLive's servers. And finally, it would deliver a lot of value to the customer. Which would you rather pay for, a $200 XBox plus $60 for a game, or pay $40 this month and play every game? The choice for a lot of people would be obvious. Hopefully OnLive will come to see this. I am surprised it isn't already obvious to them.
As of right now, I don't know who would use this service. Who is the target market? People who can't afford a decent PC, but still have $50 to spend on a game they don't own? Maybe some Mac owners will pay for it. I think they should be targeting console players who want the ultimate graphics, but the OnLive console isn't available yet.
Still, OnLive has delivered from a technical standpoint, and they may become something amazing and unique. I look forward to seeing what it might grow into.
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