Daily Nation Newspaper

Apple blocks Steam's plan to extend its video games to iPhones

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APPLE Inc (AAPL.O) has blocked the plans of the biggest distributo­r of PC-based video games to extend its reach into iPhones, according to the game distributo­r, a sign that Apple is serious about protecting its ability to take a cut of digital purchases made inside games on its mobile devices.

Steam, the dominant online store for downloaded games played on Windows PCs, had planned to release a free mobile phone app called Steam Link so that gamers could continue playing on their mobile phones while away from their desktop machines. But Apple has rejected the app, blocking its release, according to a statement from Steam’s parent company, the Bellevue, Washington-based Valve Corp.

“The team here spent many hours on this project and the approval process, so we’re clearly disappoint­ed,” Valve spokesman Doug Lombardi said in a statement to Reuters. “But we hope Apple will reconsider in the future.”

Apple did not immediatel­y return a request for comment. The magazine Variety earlier reported Steam’s rejection from the App Store. Bob O’Donnell, chief of TECHnalysi­s Research, said Apple’s move to block steam could hurt it with users between 18 and 24 years old, more than half of whom have iPhones, according to his research.

“What they’re doing is denying iPhone owners access to the most important gaming ecosystem there is,” he said. “Given that the younger demographi­c skews toward iPhones, it seems particular­ly damaging.”

Steam did not give a precise reason for the App Store denials, saying only that Apple cited “business conflicts with app guidelines.” But the conflict likely centers on what are known as in-app purchases or micro-transactio­ns, in which gamers can spend small sums of money inside games to buy tokens, extra lives or others so-called digital goods.

Lombardi said Steam disabled purchasing its iOS app but did not elaborate on how the change was made.

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