American tech giant Google, on Thursday, said it is shutting down Stadia, the cloud video game service, which they launched three years ago to let people access console-quality play as easily as they do email.
Google vice president Phil Harrison, said in a blog post, “It hasn’t gained the traction with users that we expected so we’ve made the difficult decision to begin winding down our Stadia streaming service.”
“Google said it will refund purchases of Stadia hardware, such as controllers, as well as game content bought through its online store, and that players will have access to the service through January 18 of next year,” he added.
Xbox-maker Microsoft, meanwhile, offered a rival Game Pass service “with a ton of games”, making it a more tempting option for players, Reuters reported.
Game Pass has some 25 million subscribers, while Stadia has fewer than a million, Reuters added.
Microsoft is considered the streaming video game heavyweight with its Xbox Game Pass service and a large community of players who use its consoles and desktop computers.
Govt. not considering rules for use of AI in filmmaking: Murugan
DTH revenue slide to ease to 3–4% this fiscal year: Report
At Agenda Aaj Tak, Aamir, Jaideep Ahlawat dwell on acting, Dharam
JioHotstar to invest $444mn over 5 years in South Indian content
Standing firm, TRAI rejects DoT views on satcom spectrum fee
Diljit Dosanjh wraps shoot for untitled Imtiaz Ali film
‘Bhabiji Ghar Par Hai 2.0’ to return with comedy, chaos, a supernatural twist
BBC names Bérangère Michel as new Group CFO
‘Border 2’ teaser to be unveiled on Vijay Diwas
CNN-News18 Rahul Shivshankar takes editorial charge 


