• On TechRepublic: Why VISTA HATERS will love Windows 7
October 27, 2005 2:26 PM PDT

Future looks good for online games

by Daniel Terdiman

AUSTIN, TEX.--You're sitting in a coffee shop playing "Untold Legends" on your Sony PlayStation Portable when you get a message from some friends playing on their mobile phones while riding the subway in Tokyo.

You play with them for a while, but finally decide to go home. There, you decide you're not done, so you log on from your next-generation console and pick right back up where you left off--with the same character, in the same place and even with the same people.

Finally, it's bedtime, so you go to sleep, but the next day at work, your guild friends IM you and say they're going on a raid and that you have to help out.

So you fire up your PC and log back in again. You go on the raid, kill some monsters and then bid the friends adieu.

It sounds kind of decadent, and might not please your spouse or your boss, but if you're John Smedley, president of "EverQuest" and "Star Wars Galaxies" publisher Sony Online Entertainment, it's a future bright with profitable possibilities.

"What I've just described is how we see the real world evolving," Smedley said during a keynote address to several hundred Thursday morning at the Austin Games Conference here. "We want you to be able to log in in real time from any device."

Smedley's talk was called "The future of online gaming," and he used the stage to talk about how developers of massively multiplayer online games-??which he said can now cost more than $30 million to develop??-must evolve.

Essentially, he said, the key boils down to two things: games that can be played the world over, and the ability to play games across the many different platforms in use today and in the near future.

It's a new world, he explained. Game companies, which formerly shunned--officially at least-??the trading of virtual goods for real money are going to find such traffic profitable. Thus, they're going to have to change their tune if they want to keep up with game companies that do incorporate such trading into games, as well as with companies whose entire business is facilitating such trades.

In any case, with next-generation platforms coming from Sony, Nintendo and Microsoft, and with cell phones having excellent graphics and portable game devices popping up everywhere, publishers are going to have to evolve, Smedley said. Or they'll go the way of an orc getting slain by a group of better-prepared fighters.

Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel.
advertisement
Click here!
Recent posts from News Blog
Neil Young Archives Blu-ray: Rip off?
Acronis revises survey results about backup habits
Acronis miscalculates data on users' bad backup habits
Flickr co-founder presses beta button
Comcast, Sony open retail store
Cox to try coaxing the Internet into submission
Was InfoWorld's CTO of the Year award a year late?
VMWare VI4 renamed to vSphere
advertisement

Making sense of Windows 7 upgrades

faq The basics and the fine print on Microsoft's options for those eyeing the next operating system from Redmond.
• Full Windows 7 coverage

Road Trip 2009: Big Sky Country

CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman takes his car full of gadgets to the Rockies and the Great Plains in search of tech, science, nature, and more.
• America's Fortress: Cheyenne Mountain

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right