
Don’t be bamboozled: For as rapidly as Sony is introducing the on-demand games service, its messaging at CES is telegraphing the idea that PlayStation Now is going to have a slow, gradual ramp up to its full potential. PlayStation Now might better be dubbed PlayStation (A Couple Years From) Now.

We take a walk around the Cloud Gaming Graveyard - listing all the failed cloud gaming services over the last decade.
We discuss the ups, the downs, and overall history of this technology. Turns out running a successful cloud gaming service that addresses the various technical hurdles and actually makes money is a real challenge.

PlayStation dominated cloud gaming users throughout 2021, beating Microsoft's xCloud streaming by over 10%, but Xbox swings back at PlayStation in 2022.
“In 2022, Microsoft took the lead with 60-70% of total MAUs”
From 20-30% up to 60-70%? That’s some crazy growth. Probably thanks to Fortnite.
What a clickbait headline. Why mention 2021, when the tides turned in 2022 for the obvious reason of one company making the Cloud service one of their biggest marketing pushes throughout the entire year while the other company was able to promote the games they had coming out?
And it's imprudent to suggest crazy growth when we only know proportions - did Xbox grow its proportion by attracting from the competitors' bases, did their marketing pay off and attract new users, or did cloud gamers on competitors just not play as much? The MAU figures don't point to shifts as significant as the Cloud proportions do, and Microsoft's lack of raw subscriber numbers that they happily boasted about in 2021 is telling too.

The PlayStation Brahs:
"Playstation Now will soon cease as exist as it combines with PlayStation Plus to be one super subscription, titles that won't carryover to the PlayStation Plus revamp will begin to leave the service in May."
Wait, what? I thought PS+ premium would carry over the games from PSNow?
Also this basically leaves MGS4 dead in the boneyard unless you play via RPCS3…
It's actually a lot of games that will leave at the same time.
Probably to leave some space for the PSP games that are gonna be added to the premium service.
As for MGS4, I would expect Konami to be behind the move.
Ah, yes. Bask in the "service" era. Where what you see today, is not what you'll see tomorrow, thanks to an overcomplicated system.
The "service", is simply, off the charts.
So when games leave PS Now, it's a huge issue but when games leave GamePass it's just fine? All subscription services have games / movies leave all the time.
Clorophyll?? More like Borophyll... right?
This guys Xbox definitely broke
The beta starts in a few weeks. And there is video footage of its implementation at CES. So it exists. I would really like to see them take their time and not rush it. Make sure their network is ready for the incoming onslaught later this year as millions check it out. Try to get into the Beta. I don't know what else to tell you. Getting selected will feel like winning a sweepstakes.
Didn't even have to give this one a click to see that this fanboy was butthurt about a good Sony service. I know it won't be perfect, but I was floored at the announcement and the idea of this service.
PlayStation Now? No PlayStation WOW more like it.
I love how MS advertises the "Power of the Cloud" but Sony actually shows it.
Don't get me wrong, to each their own DEFINITELY, but Hellen Keller could freaking see this service is going to be awesome.
Has anybody ever heard of the "brilliant but cruel" phenomenon?
I'm seeing alot of journalist today falling into that trap... Here's an excerpt from the article
"Stanford's Nass suggests that people are quick to vocalize their critical comments because of the "brilliant but cruel" phenomenon. This term was coined by Harvard Business School professor Teresa Amabile, after her research found that negative book reviews were seen as more intelligent and reliable than positive reviews, thus shedding light on people's natural wariness against overly positive evaluations.
"Being negative makes you feel smarter," says Nass. "The guy who says 'I agree' never seems as smart as the guy who says, 'I disagree.'"