Daily Authority: Android games on Windows
Publish date: 2022-09-21
đ Good morning! Had a great dinner out last night capped off with Kyoto only barking once. A real improvement!
Google brings Android games to Windows (not for you)
Wake up people in Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong: Google is bringing Android games to Windows in your markets, right now, and nowhere else yet, for some reason.
Whatâs happening:
- Back in December, Google announced Google Play Games would be coming to PCs.
- Just a month later, thatâs happening, if youâre in those regions and manage to get in the beta.
- Google says youâll be able to âplay a catalog of Google Play games on⊠Windows PC via a standalone application built by Google,â and testers will be able to try out popular mobile games like Asphalt 9, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Summoners War, and Three Kingdoms Tactic.
- Google says âmore than 25â games will be available. (Possibly meaning 26, I donât know.)
- Youâll need Windows 10 or 11, a gaming-class GPU, and an SSD drive with 20GB of space, some of which some gamers wonât have on more value-class laptops.
- And for what itâs worth, you can earn Play Points while playing/paying for Android games on PCs.
Why? Why now?
- Google seems to be racing to bring Android games to PC following Microsoftâs announcement that it would be bringing Android apps (not just games) to Windows 11.
- And of course, Microsoft surprisingly partnered with Amazon and its own Amazon Appstore rather than Google to achieve that.
- It could also be related to Apple allowing M1-chip Macs to run iOS apps and games too.
- But I mean⊠it is a little odd that Google just didnât touch this market at all until now, letting the likes of Bluestacks emulate games by itself.
- Itâs possible that the timing is finally right to move Android games to bigger screens, mouse and keyboard controls, and so on.
- Plus, Googleâs new Android game developer site encourages devs to optimize games for publish-once-publish-anywhere cross-device play, so maybe there were limitations that have now been overcome?
Roundup
- đ Get an early taste of the Samsung Galaxy A53âs specs and design (Android Authority).
- đ° Hereâs why your flagship phone doesnât have a telephoto camera: the lens plus OIS is reportedly reaaally expensive (Android Authority).
- đ Apple has slashed trade-in offer value on many phones, and thereâs less cash than ever on offer for trading in an Android phone. Which does prompt the question: why switch? (Android Authority).
- đ€ Oppo outlines a possible battery-free future powered by cellular, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi signals (Android Authority).
- đŹ Google is discontinuing its legacy free G Suite tier on July 1, meaning pay up or lose access to your free custom domains (Android Authority).
- đ A report says foldable phones tripled their sales in 2021: from approximately three million up to nine million sold (Display Supply Chain).
- đ¶ Qualcomm is looking to move the SIM from an eSIM to an iSIM: integrated SIM, within the SoC, to save on silicon space and boost efficiency (Qualcomm).
- đ¶ Wi-Fi 6 is so old news: MediaTek says itâs testing Wi-Fi 7 technology, first products could arrive in 2023 (XDA).
- đ§Ș Biotech: Altos Labs bursts out of stealth with $3B in financing, Jeff Bezos funding, a dream team C-suite and a wildly ambitious plan to reverse disease (Fierce Biotech).
- đ Former SpaceX engineers bring autonomous, electric rail vehicle startup out of stealth (TechCrunch).
- đ” âMicrosoftâs Activision Blizzard deal is a move toward the post-console worldâ (Wired).
- đ Amazonâs new Lord of the Rings prequel series now announced as Rings of Power is going to be all about⊠well, the Rings of Power â and hereâs what you need to know (Gizmodo).
- đ€ âELI5: What is the technical reason behind the airline industry saying 5G deployment will compromise its flights?â (r/explainlikeimfive). In short, possible interference with altimeters which may make landings an issue, so everyone wants more time to assess and certify there wonât be interference.
Throwback Thursday
Something fun for you: on this day, January 20, back in 1892, the first official basketball game was played in Springfield, Massachusetts, by YMCA students of the gameâs inventor, James A. Naismith.
- Naismith had invented basketball in 1891, âto condition young athletes during cold months,â using peach baskets and a soccer style ball.
- At first, the game was chaos: full contact, tackling, a free-for-all.
- The first rule change was to disallow running with the ball.
- The first international game was in 1893, just a year later, in Paris, in Montmartre.
- It took until 1894 for the soccer ball to be replaced by a ball Naismith contracted Spalding to make.
- And, the seriously great game of wheelchair basketball started in the mid 1940s.
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