The lights are on
(This feature originally appeared in issue 231 of Game Informer)
In previous generations, a game was a singular experience. You put it in a console, played, and completed it in front of your television with a controller in hand. Today, major publishers see their franchises as entertainment packages to be enjoyed across multiple platforms in multiple locations. They want you to take your games everywhere. Increasingly, these experiences are being delivered on a variety of social and mobile platforms. For gamers, this means that your Facebook and mobile gaming time can now be spent leveling up a character or unlocking new items in the game you’re playing on your home console.
Mobile and social gaming platforms have exploded in popularity in recent years, creating suddenly viable platforms. Companies like Zynga and Rovio have become new power players in the publishing world with games like Words with Friends and Angry Birds. While not all have been quick to respond, many traditional game publishers are starting to establish footholds on these quickly growing new platforms. Rather than spending time and money coming up with new ideas, many companies like Ubisoft are leveraging their known brands like Assassin’s Creed and Ghost Recon as a means to break into this popular market.
When Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood released in 2010, Ubisoft decided to do an experiment. Without the benefit of any advertising or marketing, the company quietly released Assassin’s Creed: Project Legacy on Facebook. The game allowed players to send out assassins on missions and collect money and experience that could be redeemed by Ezio in Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood, but Project Legacy was only promoted through in-game text in Brotherhood.
“What we were trying to find out at the time is, ‘Are there really gamers on Facebook?’” says Chris Early, vice president of digital publishing for Ubisoft. The experiment proved a success, with a strong overlap of 80 percent of gamers playing Project Legacy on Facebook also playing Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood. Early defines this new type of cross-platform gaming across singular franchises as companion gaming. “[Project Legacy] by itself is still fun to play,” Early says. “We look at, ‘How do we take that same franchise and deliver it on another platform?’ because we know that our fans aren’t sitting in front of their consoles 24 hours a day. You just don’t have as much of the benefit of companion gaming rewards if you’re not playing other games in the franchise at the same time or planning on it.”
In Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy on Facebook, players can send their collected assassins out on missions which levels them up. When you return to Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood, your assassins are even stronger. You can also earn extra skills for Ezio, as well as extra currency.
Legacy clearly indicated that Assassin’s Creed fans were interested in interacting with their favorite franchise outside of the console experience. Bolstered by its success, Ubisoft started to explore other options to engage the rabid fans of its properties. “Some guys are all about baseball all the time,” Early says. “They can quote stats to you, they watch every game on TV, they listen to it on the radio at work. They go to games a bunch, and they wear the team’s colors. That’s a very engaged fan. There is a lot for them to do. Then there are those people who maybe only watch the games in the evening on television, or read about the games in the paper.” The idea behind companion gaming is to offer the same sort of choices to gamers, except instead of sports teams, everything revolves around fictional video game universes.
Despite being smaller games on less powerful platforms, there is a degree of difficulty in producing these different types of games and allowing them to interact. Microsoft and Sony both currently restrict the cooperation of games outside of Xbox Live and PSN, but they are opening up to the idea. “In terms of restrictions from Sony and Microsoft, there are some, but they recognize that this is the age of cloud computing and I think they’re evolving to keep up,” says Aaryn Flynn, general manager of BioWare’s Edmonton and Montreal locations. “I certainly hope they do, because there’s a lot that can be done here.”
“It is technically difficult because you are really spanning game systems that weren’t designed to be spanned,” Early says. “It’s also ‘policy difficult.’ Xbox Live, for example, has been known for a long time to be a very close-walled garden, so it takes working with Microsoft to get permission to do the things that we’re looking to do for our players.”
To make these games speak to one another, companies like EA and Ubisoft have to create their own external infrastructures. “In laymen’s terms, we take data generated by the gameplay of each game or app that we create, and aggregate it up to a central server,” Flynn says. “From there, those games are also free to pull down data generated by the others, and reflect that data back in interesting and specific ways.”
Once the infrastructures are in place, developers are starting to find new and creative ways to use this data. The Call of Duty Elite app allows players to customize their assorted loadouts and classes in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, and EA recently revealed that NHL 13 will have a companion app that allows users to make trades, sign free agents, tweak their lineups, and send messages to other users to set up matches in the new Connected GM mode.
Head to page two to read about the profitability of cross-platform gaming.
Email the author Kyle Hilliard, or follow on Twitter, Google+, Facebook, and Game Informer.
For some reason, I find this kind of stuff annoying. I have no idea why, I just do.
I wouldn't mind being able to play games from my PC with my Xbox and PS3 friends, but I've already seen what Adobe Crash can do for Facebook type games, and I have absolutely no desire to associate myself with any of that garbage.
Well i hope this definitely works out. Being someone that is constantly on the go and stays at hotels completely out of town, i dont really have the space to bring my ps3 and even if i could there is always that possibility of having my system broken during transport or simply stolen so i leave mine at home. It would be extremely beneficial if i could simply game off of my personal phone playing great games such as battlefield or other entertaining tittles that i usually play off of my ps3 even if they are simply mini versions or "companion gaming". Love the idea.
Meh, I enjoyed that singular experience, because everything the developer had was put into it. Now I think games are spread too thin as publishers are trying to create all these revenue streams with things like this, DLC, movies etc.
Pretty true however.
As long as that don't make junk, or make you buy something to progress in the game on the console I am fine with this
civilization revolution. soooooo much fun on the iphone and ipad. I wish they would make another one :l
*Nods* That's why this seems so familiar. I'm not one for cross-platforming but it seems like a no-brainer and it seems kinda cool. This was a nicely comprehensive take and balanced to boot.