• sylver_dragon
    link
    English
    212 years ago

    Sounds like some Google exec recently discovered Adobe Flash and wants to relive the heyday of Newgrounds. I guess if it gets us a new Hedgehog Launch or Crush the Castle it won’t be all bad. Just have to wonder if the games will survive the inevitable closing down of the project in a couple years?

  • wagesof
    link
    fedilink
    English
    92 years ago

    Got all that stadia trash just laying around, Let’s roll it into youtube. Nobody will notice!

  • Einar
    link
    fedilink
    English
    82 years ago

    Who wants this? 🤔🤷‍♂️

    • Dae
      link
      fedilink
      English
      82 years ago

      Ever heard of “New Grounds?” They’re basically about to recreate that place. Now all they need is a forum and it’ll be complete!

      • @impulse
        link
        English
        32 years ago

        Sadly, we have to accept that we are old and a lot of people grew up after the glory days of New Grounds.

        • Dae
          link
          fedilink
          English
          32 years ago

          Indeed. New Grounds was before my time, but I’ve been there. The point was more to illustrate that there is definitely potential in this thing.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      52 years ago

      It actually kind of makes sense if it’s using stadia technology. You hit up your favorite streamer, and then if you want to play the same game they can spin up a window for you regardless of your PC specs.

  • @alokir
    link
    English
    62 years ago

    Youtube had this feature a decade ago, if you pressed the down key while the video was loading you could play Snake.

    But seriously, is this like Stadia where you can stream the games or similar to Flash (or itch.io as a more modern example), where the games will run inside the client browser?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    62 years ago

    Seems half-baked. Are they trying to resurrect the flash game? It could work as a standalone thing, but I don’t see why it needs to be part of YouTube other than the fact they’re going to shove it in our faces just like they did their TikTok clone.

    • cdipierr
      link
      English
      32 years ago

      It 100% is, and everyone loved that, so this will go great!

  • @LeZero
    link
    English
    4
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

  • @Snickeboa
    link
    English
    42 years ago

    Imagine that. Just going on YouTube, searching for a game, pick up your controller and just play. Like no installation and no loading times. That sounds like the future! But yeah, I guess there are some issues that needs to be ironed out before we’re there.

    • @JonDorfman
      link
      English
      62 years ago

      Isn’t that what Stadia was supposed to be? We have the tech, people are just so skeptical of Google (with good reason) that the project died. As for what they are talking about here, it seems they are trying to replace the old flash game sites. It could work, but I think they might be butting up against the mobile market more than they realize with this.

      • @Snickeboa
        link
        English
        22 years ago

        Yeah that was what Stadia was supposed to be. Didn’t read the article here, but I guessed that they were looking to implement some of Stadias features into Youtube. Which was what my comment was based on.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        Stadia was basically a game console as a service, assuming you had good enough internet. You had to pay for the subscription for access, then pay for each game individually. The one benefit of that was very little initial barrier to entry, as you just needed chromecast and a stadia controller.

        Youtube playables appears to be just lightweight html5 web app games that run locally in your browser, similar to what flash player was like.