Googleâs latest stab at building a social network, Google+, has (as expected) added games to its ever-growing list of services. And while it may boast many of the usual social games suspects, Google+ Games aims for more privacy and less pestering.
https://lastchance.cc/google-says-game-stream-coming-to-google-5823790%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Google+ Games appears to be rolling out publicly in waves, as changes to Google products are wont to do. The line-up of confirmed games is at least 16 strong, including Rovioâs Angry Birds, PopCap Gamesâ Bejeweled Blitz, BioWareâs Dragon Age Legends, Zynga Poker and more from Googleâs limited set of game partners.
Stressing the unobtrusive nature of its games roll outâand touching on a pet peeve of social game naysayersâGoogle says it wants to Google+ Games to be â there when you want them and gone when you donât.â
âThat means giving you control over when you see games, how you play them and with whom you share your experiences,â the company says, adhering to the social âCirclesâ structure of Google+ and addressing one of the major annoyances of games that push and pull personal info on rival Facebook.
âIf youâre not interested in games, itâs easy to ignore them. Your stream will remain focused on conversations with the people you care about.â
On the companyâs developer blog, Google engineering director David Glazer writes that Google+ Games is launching âwith a small number of partners so that we could experiment, get the kinks out of our APIs, and get real end-user feedback before opening up to the world. â
âBecause we want to provide both a great user experience and a great developer experience,â Glazer writes, âweâre focusing on quality before quantity.â
Whether Google chip away at the dominance in social games already established by Zyngaâwhich has exclusivity agreements with Facebook for popular titles like FarmVille, Mafia Wars and CityVilleâwith a focus on quality and privacy remains to be seen.
While an intriguing move, Google+ Games is certainly not the companyâs first foray into games. The company launched its Chrome Web Store last year, selling and giving away in-browser gaming apps to converts of its Chrome platform. Earlier this year, it began handing out a free version of Rovioâs smash hit Angry Birds to Chrome users.
Games in Google+: fun that fits your schedule [Official Google Blog]
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