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.

:arrow: Source
 

Kioku

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America's Shitty Internet Infrastructure™

I'd say that is only a small part of the reason. A lot of people have had a "positive" experience with Stadia. Hell, I'm on Spectrum and had minimal issues playing Destiny 2 that weren't latency related. Their marketing strategies really played a key role in their downfall. Why would I want to spend triple digits a year, on top of buying games for that singular platform, just to be locked to it? Better yet, why SHOULD I? The inconsistent internet service providers are problematic, sure. However, there's no legitimate reason to use a strictly cloud-based platform outside of "because I can".
 

xdarkx

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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.
IIRC, because Nvidia allows you to play games which you own on Steam, whereas, Stadia requires you to buy the games and can only be played on their cloud server. And if Stadia were to shutdown... oh wait.
 

Marc_LFD

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The Stadia controller is pretty great. It's probably got my favorite thumbsticks of any controller I've used. It can only be used wired with a USB-C cable as a generic HID-compliant controller, but I'm hoping there will be some project enabling Bluetooth in the future.
It was really stupid of Google to restrict the wireless usability for the Stadia app only. I don't mind wired controllers, but this has a built-in battery and could be used wireless perfectly.

🙁
 

linuxares

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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.
Oh no you don't get it. You pay for the service and had to buy games for full price as well. It wasn't a streaming thingy like Xbox Game Pass.
 

NyaakoXD

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Why am I not surprised. Along with the inherent issues with cloud-based gaming (input latency and the like), a huge majority of people don't even have fast, stable, and unlimited data internet. Of course practically no one would want to pay for such a shitty product that only appeals to like the top 1% (or even less).

I would give them credit to give every Stadia owner a full refund, but that makes it all the more hilarious because they could only afford to do that because barely anyone bought Stadia, so it'd be like pocket change for Google to give out.
 

MikaDubbz

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One day a streaming only system will be a great viable product for the masses that could be future-proof, but we're still a long ways from that time.
 

HarveyHouston

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How many people get to exclaim that they called it?​
Well, me, for one. I definitely saw this coming, and frankly, I'm glad it didn't work out. Cloud-based gaming is always going to be sketchy, even as wireless signals improve. If Google could do it more in-house, i.e. on the local systems where the games will be played (as has been done for years and proven that this works best), then they have a winning strategy on their hands.

I mean, Stadia was more or less an experiment that failed. I could see that we would be the beta testers, hence why I wasn't so excited about joining the program. Too many people complained about testy connectivity, and even Google execs didn't think it was that great (why else did they leave?).

So.... good riddance! :creep:
 

Nostalgia

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Microsoft still is betting a lot on their cloud thing. Also they don't sell shit, but push monthly fees a lot too. This is the big danger for our beloved hobby right now, since stadia died.
huh? cloud on xbox is just a secondary option

they don't sell shit? what do u mean
 

pedro702

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this would never work imo, paying full price for streaming games and then they would need to key those games on stream forever and so on.
 

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