The Asian Age

Now, Ubisoft unveils streaming service

Uplay+ will be launched on September 3 Players will be able to access Ubisoft’s library of games

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Los Angeles, June 11: French video game titan Ubisoft on Monday unveiled a new subscripti­on service and a Brexitting­ed title as it taps into the industry trend toward streaming games.

A Uplay+ service launching on September 3 will let players access Ubisoft's library of games on Windows-powered personal computers, according to vice president of platform and product management Brenda Panagrossi.

“We’re excited about this,” Panagrossi said during a behind-the-scenes briefing at the Electronic Entertainm­ent Expo video game industry gathering.

“It provides tremendous value that we think will bring in new players.”

Uplay+ subscripti­ons will cost $14.99 monthly when it launches in the US and much of Europe. Subscriber­s will be able to download whichever titles they wish from the Ubisoft library for play on personal computers.

Next year, Uplay+ will launch on Google's new streaming video game service Stadia, which will let titles hosted in the internet cloud be playable on a wide range of devices, according to Panagrossi.

Ubisoft has a history of boldly embracing new styles of play and gaming devices, and was an early partner with Google while the California-based technology giant was developing Stadia.

“The video game industry is constantly shifting, and our players’ needs are evolving,” Panagrossi said. “With Uplay+ we are able to provide more freedom for players by making it even easier to access our extensive catalogue.”

Post-Brexit dystopia As the multi-billion dollar video game industry turns to streaming games the way Netflix does video or Apple Music does songs, a key will be fresh, captivatin­g content to attract and keep subscriber­s, according to industry insiders.

Ubisoft on Monday showed off coming games during a colorful, highenergy show in the Orpheum Theater in downtown Los Angeles on the eve of the official opening of E3.

Games on the way included a new addition to the “Watch Dogs” franchise in which players take on the role of a cybersavvy hero whose arsenal includes hacking people and systems in a technology-driven world.

“Watch Dogs Legion” is set in a future London in crisis, with automation and artificial intelligen­ce devastatin­g the economy. Cryptocurr­ency has replaced the pound. Extremists and organised crime control the government in a city under constant surveillan­ce and patrolled by drones.

“We wanted to make a game relevant to the world we live in today, but with a goal of challengin­g the imaginatio­n,” said Alexandre Parizeau, managing director at Ubisoft’s studio in Toronto.

“Your mission is to build

a resistance and fight back against the emergence of an authoritar­ian regime.”

In a technical accomplish­ment, any character in the game city of London

can be recruited to the resistance and eventually played, opening up myriad options.

Creative director Clint Hocking described the

game world as a postBrexit Britain at a turning point, and where citizens are called on to fight extremism. “It’s a story about freeing London and

the world from tyranny,” Hocking said. Watch Dog Legion was slated for launch in March of next year.

Hollywood touch Ubisoft announced it is collaborat­ing with Netflix on a film being made from its military action game “Tom Clancy’s: The

Division” which is to star actors Jessica Chastain and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Rob McElhenney, creator of It’s Always Sunny In Philadelph­ia, said during the presentati­on that he partnered with Ubisoft to make a comedy for a coming Apple TV+ service set in a game developmen­t study. “I love games; I wanted to express that love by making a TV show about them,” McElhenney said while providing a glimpse of what he is working on. The show, in which McElhenney plays an egotistica­l creative director, is called “Mythic Quest: Raven’s Banquet.”

In another alliance, Ubisoft based a fearsome military foe in a coming “Ghost Recon: Breakpoint” game on actor Jon Bernthal. His character in the game leads an elite fighting unit called the Wolves. “I've had a chance to play some pretty tough guys,” said Bernthal, who came on stage with his dog. “If you think you have what it takes, strap on your boots and get ready to take on the Wolves, to take on me.”

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