"The next gaming console will be a cloud gaming console"

Tech company Shadow wants to pull off the ultimate gamer magic trick, giving you all the p🃏ower of a high-end gaming PC without the hardware. In an interview with GamesRadar+, the president and CEO of the company Emmanuel Freund explaineဣd why you should bet on the the next generation of consoles being powered by the cloud. 

"The f♈uture of gaming, and the future of humanity of course, is the cloud," he says. "The nex✱t gaming console will be a cloud gaming console."

Freund also believes𝄹 that the cloud can make gaming accessible to more people. 

"Normally video games are the cheapest entertainment ever. You’re paying 50 🤡bucks to play a game for 100 hours or 1000 hours," he explains. "So it’s the cheap🉐est entertainment ever but to get access to this entertainment you need to buy a $400 console or a $1000 - or even more - PC. So it’s actually diminishes by a lot the kind of people who can access this kind of entertainment."

In the interview above, he also explai🐲ns the perks for the people who make games, the developers who have to worry about different consoles, PC specs and online gamep𝐆lay needs. 

"It enables also a new way of development. So you can imagine your big servers and your players are already there. You can add one million players sudd🔜enly and you don’t need to synchronize everything. You just need to send the results, because everything is happening there. And so suddenly you reduce th🎃e time of development by one third."

Shadow also just announced Hive -  a new platform for its growing global community of 50,000 members - which will allow users to "share their gaming experiences in real-time, allowing friends to join in each other’s games, live chat, track another’s progress❀ or offer advice based on one’s gaming position in real-time." 

What games would make cloud gaming worthwhile? Here are the 25 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best PC games that are available now.

Rachel Weber
Contributor

Rachel Weber is the former US Managing 🍷Editor of GamesRadar+ and lives in Bro🌟oklyn, New York. She joined GamesRadar+ in 2017, revitalizing the news coverage and building new processes and strategies for the US team.