Support us on Patreon to keep GamingOnLinux alive. This ensures all of our main content remains free for everyone. Just good, fresh content! Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal. You can also buy games using our partner links for GOG and Humble Store.
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Steam Play thoughts: A Valve game streaming service

By - | Views: 32,004

With the talk of some big players moving into cloud gaming, along with a number of people thinking Valve will also be doing it, here’s a few thoughts from me.

Firstly, for those that didn’t know already, Google are testing the waters with their own cloud gaming service called Project Stream. For this, they teamed up with Ubisoft to offer Assassin’s Creed Odyssey on the service. I actually had numerous emails about this, from a bunch of Linux gamers who managed to try it out and apparently it worked quite well on Linux.

EA are pushing pretty heavily with this too with what they’re calling Project Atlas, as their Chief Technology Officer talked about in a Medium post on how they’ve got one thousand EA employees now working on it. That sounds incredibly serious to me!

There’s more cloud services offering hardware for a subscription all the time, although a lot of them are quite expensive and use Windows.

So this does beg the question: What is Valve going to do? Cloud gaming services, that will allow people with lower-end devices to play a bunch of AAA games relatively easily could end up cutting into Valve’s wallet.

Enter Valve’s Cloud Gaming Service

Pure speculation of course, but with the amount of big players now moving into the market, I’m sure Valve will be researching it themselves. Perhaps this is what Steam Play is actually progressing towards? With Steam Play, Valve will be able to give users access to a large library of games running on Linux where they don’t have to pay extra fees for any sort of Windows licensing fee from Microsoft and obviously being Linux it would allow them to heavily customise it to their liking.

On top of that, what about the improvements this could further bring for native desktop Linux gaming? Stop and think about it for a moment, how can Valve tell developers they will get the best experience on this cloud gaming platform? Have a native Linux version they support with updates and fixes. Valve are already suggesting developers to use Vulkan, it’s not such a stretch I think.

Think about how many games, even single-player games are connected to the net now in some way with various features. Looking to the future, having it so your games can be accessed from any device with the content stored in the cloud somewhere does seem like the way things are heading. As much as some (including me) aren’t sold on the idea, clearly this is where a lot of major players are heading and Valve won’t want to be left behind.

For Valve, it might not even need to be a subscription service, since they already host the data for the developers. Perhaps, you buy a game and get access to both a desktop and cloud copy? That would be a very interesting and tempting idea. Might not be feasible of course, since the upkeep on the cloud machines might require a subscription if Valve wanted to keep healthy profits, but it’s another way they could possibly trump the already heavy competition.

Think the whole idea is incredibly farfetched? Fair enough, I do a little too. However, they might already have a good amount of the legwork done on this, thanks to their efforts with the Steam Link. Did anyone think a year or two ago you would be able to stream Steam games to your phone and tablet?

Valve also offer movies, TV series and more on Steam so they have quite a lot to offer.

It might not happen at all of course, these are just some basic thoughts of mine on what Valve’s moves might be in future. It's likely not going to happen for VR titles, since they need so much power and any upset with latency could make people quite sick. Highly competitive games would also be difficult, but as always once it gets going the technology behind it will constantly improve like everything. There’s got to be some sort of end game for all their Linux gaming work and not just to help us, they are a business and they will keep moving along with all the other major players.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
18 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. Find me on Mastodon.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
47 comments
Page: 1/5»
  Go to:

Shmerl Nov 1, 2018
Not really interested in that sort of thing. DRM already dilutes ability to back up and preserve games. This kind of "streaming" will only make it worse in this sense.
kellerkindt Nov 1, 2018
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
This COULD be THE game changer, although I dont believe cloud gaming will be a serious thing...

Also what comes into my mind is the OpenGL passthrough-ish support of KVM...
Is a Vulkan equivalent in the working?

MAinstream gaming on Cloud-Linux-VMs... That this though isn't utterl bullshit... What a time to be alive :)
Nanobang Nov 1, 2018
View PC info
  • Supporter
I'm no fan of "the" cloud in general as it continues the trend of further eroding control of what otherwise would be one's personal property. Looking past that, in the case of "cloud gaming," while the selling point of people being able to play AAA games with mega-whammo graphics on "low end hardware" sounds nice on the surface, almost all of those games are available on the major consoles anyway. And what does all this mean to those folks who have crap broadband (like oh-so-many-folks in the U.S., for example?)

3D gaming, VR, IoT, and now "cloud gaming," all feel like whiz bang Here-Comes-the-Future-and-Ain't-it-Neato developments having less to do with actual technological advancements and more to do with some marketing director's quarterly bonus.

And long gone are the days where Google's involvement was a reason for me to get excited. If Google's doing it, they're just looking for more data. Besides, nowadays Google feels less like the Queen of innovation and more like the Burgomeister of false starts and dead-end dreams. And that cloud gaming's other big player is EA---voted how many times the Most Evil Company in America?---tells me all I need to know about this thing.

I'm not saying there's nothing worth reporting here, nor that it's impossible that "cloud gaming" won't be the next big thing. I'm just saying I'm not thrilled at the prospect of corporations looking to yet another method of insinuating themselves into my personal life. Hope Valve holds off a while longer.


Last edited by Nanobang on 1 November 2018 at 11:47 am UTC
Gobo Nov 1, 2018
Steaming a cloud game separates the player from the game in all ways except audio, video and input. If you look back just a few decades and realize how many games, game ideas, mods, levels, add-ons, peripherals etc. rooted in the tinkering with game content on your own computer it makes cloud gaming look plainly harming. Think about how many people entered the gaming biz just because they were able to tip their toes on their computers at home.

Steam's streaming is making a game you bought and run on your own device available to other, lesser potent devices at home. That's convenience. It's still possible to mod the game, run it through a modern port or whatever you wish to do. Spectator streams just split audio and video to third parties, but the single player is still in control, only his or her input is used to interact with the game streamed to everyone else connected.

You can put Steam into offline mode and play any installed games without someone else knowing when you play which game for how long. Good luck doing the same on a platform that forces always online by design.

Yes, I can see the benefits for players just giving a game they are interested in a test drive before they buy. Or players without access to mid to high end gaming rigs having an option to play the game on devices that are incapable of running the code on their own. But I still think those walled gardens cloud platforms essentially are are harmful for the industry as a whole.
x_wing Nov 1, 2018
I definitely believe that this is the future of gaming... But we are still 10 years away from it.

The biggest problem for a gaming cloud service is that it requires a very low latency with a good bandwidth (you are almost don't allowed to have any buffering, which means that video streaming will get quite heavy). So, with the current state of networks and amount servers farm, we still need to work a lot to achieve this requirements (at least in the 95% of the countries in the world).

But yeah, eventually in will become a reality and Linux will be running these gaming server.

One side note: for complex competitive games (pubg, csgo, etc.) moving all the game to the cloud will simplify a lot (if not completely remove them) the anti cheat software. I think that this feature would be quite seductive for such games.
rkfg Nov 1, 2018
So we're gonna make a full circle from the fears of Windows Shop/Market walled garden to Valve's walled garden. You already know what's in the spoiler, right?

Spoiler, click me
Yeah,

It didn't quite work for OnLive, although Sony bought them and now have this thing I've never even heard about. If they leave the streaming service as an option, it's fine by me. Considering the wide range of game prices and their quality, I imagine there could be different tiers like "basic", "indie", "AAA" or such with different minute/hour price. At least because they could optimize the hardware and power consumption based on the game you're gonna play, some cheap integrated Intel card is enough to run Rimworld but you'll need a beefy GTX for Tomb Raider, Serious Sam or Prey. So that + per minute (or hour) tariff + regional prices + play any¹ game without purchasing = could be pretty competitive.

________
¹ not really any but from those participating in this program, could be slightly dated games (2-3 years old) to boost profits because it's easier to start playing instantly without downloading and installing anything.
Ardje Nov 1, 2018
I would really love Valve to make cloud streaming possible for users doing it themselves...
In the end cloud streaming suffers from latency, so I won't be really paying anybody for renting games.
Not all games suffer that much from latency though, and I even succeeded playing a mission in Saints Row 3 on a GPD WIN with about 1..3FPS (winning from a bunch of zombies).
So I want to be able to do it, my way, on hardware I have available (or rent).
rkfg Nov 1, 2018
Quoting: ArdjeI would really love Valve to make cloud streaming possible for users doing it themselves...
In the end cloud streaming suffers from latency, so I won't be really paying anybody for renting games.
Not all games suffer that much from latency though, and I even succeeded playing a mission in Saints Row 3 on a GPD WIN with about 1..3FPS (winning from a bunch of zombies).
So I want to be able to do it, my way, on hardware I have available (or rent).
Uhhhh, you already have home streaming, why not use that? For internet that might be tricky but I succeeded with tap VPN, played Dying Light from work on my home PC using this feature. You just need to setup OpenVPN or any other software so that it provides a tap adapter (L2) and setup the IPs from the same network on both sides. No routing/gateways needed, it's all fully "transparent" for any program, broadcast just works etc. so Steam thinks you're on the same LAN and allows to stream.
Beamboom Nov 1, 2018
Steam Play as a means for the streaming clusters to run Linux? Now that is an intriguing train of though that I've never thought of...


Last edited by Beamboom on 1 November 2018 at 12:29 pm UTC
Zlopez Nov 1, 2018
  • Supporter Plus
I'm not sure is this is really a good idea (regarding cloud services, that are looking for personal data - looking at Google), but it looks nice. I don't know about you, but I have plenty of games on GoG, Humble Bundle and Steam, that I never really want to play (most of the time I bought them with some bundle). So playing on cloud (in case, this only wants my money, not my personal information) could be nice. To have access to any game on cloud (probably newest titles will need some premium account) is pretty nice.

If it will be open source I will certainly support it.
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.