Less than a year ago, EA told PC gamers it would give them something that many PC gamers probably thought they didnât need: a competitor to Steam.
Another PC storefront for downloading games.
Another PC service for connecting PC gamers.
Another thing to install and⊠wait, whereâd the EA games go on Steam?
EAâs service is called Origin. Itâs been notorious. But now EA can tell you that itâs popular. And the man who has most championed it, the companyâs chief operating officer and number two exec, Peter Moore, tells Kotaku that after a rocky launch and major customer skepticism, heâs sure EA will get Origin right.
âIf you go back and dust off the transcripts of when Steam first came out, it had the same reaction,â Moore told me during an interview at an EA Showcase in New York City. âPeople didnât like it. You were obligated.â [Note from Stephen: hereâs a 2004 Steam Sucks thread. And hereâs another.]
But Valve boss Gabe Newell made sure his crew kept improving it. âThey provided, over the yearsâto Gabe and the teamâs creditâvalue to the gamer. Those first 12 months were very rocky.â
Origin is less than a year old. Itâs mandatory to play Battlefield 3 and encouraged for Star Wars: The Old Republic. Four out of 10 players of The Old Republic use it. Origin lets you chat with friends but has no message boards. It mostly just sells games. Itâs got 9.5 million registered users, as of last week, who have spent some $100 million on in-store transactions.
https://lastchance.cc/to-no-ones-surprise-all-pc-installs-of-battlefield-3-w-5830194%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
âWe felt the PC business was having a little bit of a renaissance,â Moore told me, âand we felt great opportunity with both Star Wars and Battlefield. Mass Effect to come. That this was the time to build out a true platform.â
Moore says Origin will help EA improve its connection to PC gamers as EA, in general, takes a more active role in selling stuff directly to gamers at the right price and frequency in the right way (i.e. the kind of access they wish they had to console gamers but donât because Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo are in their way).
Getting close to gamers has its downside, and that is what has been freaking some gamers out who see Origin as a way to get way too close to a gamerâs life. This is big-conglomerate EA weâre talking about. (As opposed to big-conglomerate Sony or Microsoft, EA might say; but the comparison is still, for consumers, to the cozier Valve).
âWe need to continue to add social layers so there is value to the consumer,â Moore said, âso it doesnât feel like, in their words, âsomething that is mandatory that I donât want.â And it got off to a rocky start for all the wrong reasons which were mostly inaccurate: accusations of spyware. The EULA⊠We were clearly focused on by some folks who said, âWe donât like this. How can we start picking things apart?'â
https://lastchance.cc/ea-says-its-totally-not-spying-on-you-5855476%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
He also believes that Origin is already past the worst criticism itâs going to get. âItâs quieted down,â he said. âI donât think you see the initial level of vitriol. And Iâve been in gaming long enough [that I know that] if you try to add something thatâs different and particularly if you add the layer that itâs EA and everything that goes with it.â
It didnât help EAâs goodwill that they named their Steam competitor after a beloved old game development studio that the company bought and then shut down, I pointed out to Moore.
He said Originâs name was not meant to refer to the old Ultima creators at Origins Systems. âIâm in Silicon Valley and the [new product] names have become unpronounceable because theyâve run out of real names,â he said. âI felt it was a great name. We knew we could protect it, which in the world we live in, is job one.â
EAâs latest push on Origin is to add more games from third-party publishers. Theyâre up to 21 of them, including THQ, Warner Brothers Interactive Entertainment and Capcom.
Itâs unlikely that EA rival Activision will ever show up there. But what about Valve? âItâs an open platform,â Moore replied. âThere is nothing I would love more than to have Valveâs⊠everybodyâs games. Weâre talking to every publisher, as you can imagine.
âI think itâs healthy for the industry to have more opportunities to go, if you will, to shop around, to find different things that you like, different content. The more stores there are for me in the mall, the more entertaining it is. Sometimes my wife will drag me to a little boutique mall thatâs got like eight stores. [groans] I like the gamut. I like choice.â
For Origin to be a choice that gamers donât resent it will have to be more than mandatory or heavily-promoted. It will have to be a great service that offers obvious value. Steam currently does that. Moore knows Origin needs to step it up.
âItâs one of those things where I would ask: give us 18 months to two years. And if we sit here two years from now, start looking at it then,â he said. âI think the ability to have your own direct platform with the consumer is going to be very important in the digital world going forward.â