playcast

Latest

  • PlayCast cloud gaming service is coming to the US in 2013, we go hands-on a bit early

    by 
    Michael Gorman
    Michael Gorman
    12.12.2012

    We're no stranger to cloud gaming services 'round these parts -- we covered OnLive's brush with death and subsequent rebirth and Sony's acquisition of Gaikai. Meanwhile, Playcast has been growing on its own, working on deals with US content distributors, and now the company is set to roll out its gaming platform Stateside early next year. We got a chance to see Playcast's service and chat with VP of Corporate Development, Meir Freidlander and VP of R&D Yuval Noimark about their business, so join us after the break to see what the company has in store for us in 2013.%Gallery-173261%

  • Playcast aiming for Q1 2013 US launch of cloud-gaming service

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    12.07.2012

    We haven't had much reason to discuss Playcast Media recently, with the Israel-based outfit failing to beat OnLive to the cloud-gaming market back in 2009. As of now, the Playcast Media service is live in Portugal, France and South Korea, but the company is set to launch its platform in the United States early next year.So what is Playcast? It's a cloud gaming service streaming through set-top boxes, tablets, smartphones and PCs – basically, anything that can run Android 4.0 and higher.%Gallery-172889%

  • Cable, IPTV providers reportedly testing cloud-based HD gaming for launch next year

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    09.26.2012

    The next generation of consoles from Sony and Microsoft haven't even been announced yet but their best competition may be from your cable TV / internet provider, according to a report from Bloomberg. The only-too-eager-to-talk people familiar with the matter named AT&T U-Verse, Verizon FiOS and Time Warner Cable as services preparing tests before the end of the year with general availability planned for 2013. Comcast and Cox were also name dropped as potential candidates to bring console-quality HD games directly to customers, based on tech from startups like Playcast, CiiNOW and Agawi. Of course, while we've seen this sort of setup before (as seen above, check out an awesomely 90s Sega Channel ad after the break) and recently from OnLive and Gaikai, cloud gaming has yet to catch on in a major way. Whether this potential approach is all smoke or will actually turn into reality has yet to be seen, but after TV Everywhere we wouldn't be surprised to see providers toss in gaming as another incentive for subscribers not to cut the cord. [Image credit: Sega Retro]

  • Playcast Media nabs support from big name publishers, aims to bring STB gaming to US

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    03.12.2010

    GDC is winding down here in San Francisco, but Playcast Media is hoping to snag its 15 minutes by announcing new partnerships with Atari, Capcom, Codemasters and THQ (to name a few) for use in its "console-free games-on-demand" service. 'Course, streaming games in through a set-top-box is nothing new, but few operators in the States offer such a thing with any real substance behind it. Playcast's solution enables titles to be pushed through existing cable and telco STBs, and we're told that the US market is next in line to get gifted. We're not given any significant details beyond that, but we're pretty jazzed about big name publishers signing on to finally give this distribution method a bit of credence. Now, if only this Scientific Atlanta Explorer 8300HD shipped with a SIXAXIS controller, we'd be golden.

  • Playcast hoping to beat OnLive to the game streaming punch

    by 
    Griffin McElroy
    Griffin McElroy
    07.20.2009

    We're still not comfortable with the magical technoworkings that apparently allow OnLive to summon games from the ether -- to think that other companies have the engineering prowess to pull it off is terrifying. According to a recent press release, a startup company named Playcast Media has teamed up with an Israeli cable network called Hot to stream "PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 quality games," straight to Israel's set-top cable boxes. The service is in beta now -- in Q1 2010, it'll rollout over all of Israel. It's expected to hit "major markets" in the US, Asia and Europe later that year.That's a lot of heady claims from a service we know so little about. Fortunately, an Israeli tech journalist named Denis Vitchevsky got a chance to check out the service, and came off with an optimistic impression. He says the technology is "somewhat similar to OnLive," and that the demo he witnessed "worked quite well." He claims Playcast has signed agreements with a few publishers, and is promising a huge library at launch. For now, the service is offering PC ports -- but no M rated games just yet, due to a lack of parental control features.We're trying to get more info on the service, but as you might imagine, it takes a while for emails to zip between here and Israel.