EA Believes In One Standard Console Future

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Mega-publisher Electronic Arts has joined the ever-increasing list of notable industry figures that are hoping for a one console future. By having one standardized platform, proponents of the plan argue that it would ease development concerns and reduce the consumer confusion that comes from having multiple consoles in the market.

"We want an open, standard platform which is much easier than having five which are not compatible," EA executive Gerhard Florin (pictured left) told BBC. "We're platform agnostic and we definitely don't want to have one platform which is a walled garden."

Florin's belief is becoming a common one amongst developers. "Honestly, we'd rather spend time making the games than worrying about the hardware," Silicon Knights president Denis Dyack said during this year's Game Developers Conference. "And if everyone had the same hardware and when you made a game you knew you got 100% penetration because anyone who plays this game had to buy this hardware platform just like a DVD or whatever standard media format's going to be. I think that would ultimately be much better for gamers."

Renowned game designer John Romero made a similar statement earlier this year. "My prediction is that the game console in the vein of the PS3 and Xbox 360 is going to either undergo a massive rethink or go away altogether," Romero said. "The hardcore gamers are going to either be playing on their PCs or a new PC-like platform that sits in the living room but still serves the whole house over wifi, even the video signal."

The stance that dedicated consoles will be replaced by a standardized set-top box with content delivered via the internet is rooted in the growing role of digital distribution in today's market. All three of the major consoles--Sony's PlayStation 3, Microsoft's Xbox 360, and Nintendo's Wii--are capable of connecting to the internet and downloading new games. PC software such as Valve's Steam and Turner Broadcasting's GameTap allows users to buy and download new and older titles without leaving their home.

Several companies, such as Infinium Labs and the Envizions Computer Entertainment Corporation, have made attempts at pioneering the standardized set-top box gaming market, though they have yet to experience their projected success.

"I believe the days of the console are numbered," Trion World Network CEO Lars Buttler, who formerly served as a vice president of EA's global online divison, claimed. "There is one more generation of gaming consoles and that is it."

That said, Florin is a bit more generous in his projected life span of the console market. "I am not sure how long we will have dedicated consoles--but we could be talking up to 15 years," he noted.

Chris Faylor was previously a games journalist creating content at Shacknews.

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From The Chatty
  • reply
    October 19, 2007 9:29 AM

    [deleted]

    • reply
      October 19, 2007 9:47 AM

      Yup, that was the vision with the 3D0, and it was a colossal failure. I have no idea why they would push for an open standard, as it would pretty much remove any incentive to innovate and it would end up being lowest common denominator. Goodbye Wii controller, goodbye Achievements, goodbye Blu-ray, goodbye expensive GPU. Hardware design by committee is almost never going to produce something that is great.

    • reply
      October 19, 2007 9:58 AM

      No, an exec from EA left and founded 3DO and failed horribly. EA themselves didn't.

    • reply
      October 19, 2007 10:00 AM

      Funny because I was thinking the exact same thing...
      "Oh shit! Hawkins was right..."

      Problem though, was that the technology was licensed to vendors like Goldstar, etc. So it's kinda the inverse. Instead of having one standard platform common to everything. We had one platform made by many vendors.

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