Google is shutting down Stadia, will refund all purchases made on the service

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How many people get to exclaim that they called it? Because in January 2023, Google will be shutting down Stadia, its cloud streaming game service. Stadia launched back in 2019, and allowed users to purchase games through the service, and have them streamed to their device via the cloud. It also offered a subscription service that cost $10 a month, and featured 4K resolution support and a library of free games each month.

Things began to get shaky for Stadia in early 2021, following the departure of the project's VP, and then the prompt closing of all internal Stadia game development studios. After the decision to not develop any indie games in-house after that, it was reported that Google paid "ten of millions" of dollars to secure AAA Stadia ports. Back in July of this year, the official Stadia Twitter account assured fans that it was not shutting down amidst rumors and reports that the opposite was true.

Google's reasoning behind shutting down Stadia is that it never gained the traction that the company expected it to. Anyone who has purchased any Stadia games will have until January 18, 2023 to play them, and after which, the service will be shuttered. Customers that made any purchases, whether it was Stadia games, add-on content, or even hardware, will be fully refunded by the end of January 2023.

We’re grateful to the dedicated Stadia players that have been with us from the start. We will be refunding all Stadia hardware purchases made through the Google Store, and all game and add-on content purchases made through the Stadia store. Players will continue to have access to their games library and play through January 18, 2023 so they can complete final play sessions. We expect to have the majority of refunds completed by mid-January, 2023. We have more details for players on this process on our Help Center.

The underlying technology platform that powers Stadia has been proven at scale and transcends gaming. We see clear opportunities to apply this technology across other parts of Google like YouTube, Google Play, and our Augmented Reality (AR) efforts — as well as make it available to our industry partners, which aligns with where we see the future of gaming headed. We remain deeply committed to gaming, and we will continue to invest in new tools, technologies and platforms that power the success of developers, industry partners, cloud customers and creators.

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x65943

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Due to inflation they are actually refunding you less money than you paid initially for the service

I do wonder how many people actually tried this - I don't know anyone personally
 

Kioku

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I don't understand why Stadia got all this flack. Nvidia now is very similar and yet I don't see anyone hating on it.
Nvidia Now isn't a completely separate service, with its own social network infrastructure that walls itself off from the rest of the gaming world. Nvidia now allows you to play titles you already own and to purchase titles to use on YOUR accounts. That's part of the reason.
 

LainaGabranth

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With a cable it is (USB-A to USB-C unless you'd have USB-C only).

It doesn't work wireless as Google made it wireless exclusive for Stadia which is gonna close soon, anyway.
What the fuck. Man now I'm even more glad it's dead.
 
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Tbh all kinds of "cloud streaming" services should be terminated for good.
They do nothing but harm the user with the idiocy of gaming while relying on shady internet connections, and let's not talk about the DRM implications here.
Xbox cloud gaming isn't that bad, but that at least gives you the option to download the games instead
 

mrdude

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Why on earth would someone spend £120 a year for that when they could just buy real physical games and play them anytime they wanted without worrying about some server going offline? I'm not a fan of game streaming or paying for something like a game where you don't get a physical copy. No wonder it's shutting down.
 

LainaGabranth

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Cloud gaming as a concept is fine; being able to stream games you own from more powerful hardware to lesser hardware is good. Digital only storefronts however are bad, full stop, and I think more people need to realize this distinction. GeForce Now or whatever the fuck it's called for example is a harmless thing at worst, and a net good thing for gaming at best, because it makes gaming more accessible to people with the only real requirement being a stable internet connection and a strong enough CPU or GPU to handle the stream itself.

Stadia however was bad, because it was heavily walled off, and didn't promote any actual ownership of anything. You owned literally nothing and now all of your game saves and the like are straight up GONE for good, unless Google opens up the walled gardens and lets you download your data to take with you to physical systems. You can't mod the games, you can't see how they work, you can't even fuck with config files in case something is broken or doesn't work right out of the box.

Just my two cents, since I see a lot of conflation of game streaming with cloud-only gaming and the two couldn't be *more* different.
 

LainaGabranth

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I just gotta wonder, what'll happen to the controllers once the service is dead?
Based on what another guy said here they should be usable on PC with a cable. I expect curious hackers will get the wireless working.
 

Randqalan

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It's good that they're refunding everyone though. If it was any other company, they would've most likely told everyone to go fuck themselves.
Yeah Sony for one would do this lost 5k because of PS3 cfw was detected. I still respect Google if they keep there promise.

Any way I get back at Sony now.

30 years and they did this to me makes me want revenge anyway possible.
 

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I always liked playing stadia i was able to have a complete portfolio of games without lugging around hefty storage devices. I always have wifi which i found to be no problem. this is kinda disappointing because I still play assassins creed from time to time and have a big save file made up. Idk if i will ask for the refund because i use it so much. And the controller is one of the best in the business it's crazy it never gained traction
 
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UltraHurricane

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yeah, Google really sucked at running Stadia and made a lot of obvious problems on the business-side of things, but the problem is that no amount of good marketing and consumer-friendly changes would saved Stadia, and all these big stand-alone cloud gaming services are doomed to fail for one major reason...

America's Shitty Internet Infrastructure™

for every Stadia customer who said it played great and never had serious hiccups, there were at least 20 that would say how much of an unplayable mess it was, it really only could have catered to those with the highest of high speed connections and allegedly even THAT wasn’t a guarantee, not to mention a lot of ISPs that are still imposing data caps which also killed interest if we were expecting so many people to be streaming the same high-quality 4K AAA game on launch, so realistically it could only really appeal to people with high speed uncapped internet but low-powered hardware... which is not a lot of people

there are many reasons why a game streaming service can and should fail, but the biggest that got in the way is the stifling, antiquated monopoly that the likes of Comcast, AT&T, and Spectrum have created, and until something is done about that then cloud gaming will at best be a niche
 

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