PlayStation Mobile shackles Sony to gaming past
In the announcement for the PlayStation Mobile store and environment released this week by Sony is a clause that’s rather tiny and is disguised as a perk: three devices allowed for every game. Ago, back before the smartphone, this type of note would had been amazing – you mean i’m able to play this game on my PlayStation at home in addition to at my cousin Joe’s house? Amazing! Now here within the present, three devices is a limit that Sony will not be working with. As the gaming universe very, very reluctantly starts making its way into the mobile environment, limits in play continue to seem here and there. A feature for the PlayStation Vita is cross-compatibility with some games between it and the PlayStation 3. Cross-compatibility for a game between smartphones and tablets should, by all means, be a given by now. With the PlayStation Mobile environment, that you can play a game you buy on three devices and that is it – once you’ve played the sport in your tablet and your smartphone, you get one other choice. For most of the people, this is not a difficulty. If you have got a smartphone and a tablet, you’re probably going to have those devices for a while to return. If you are going to buy a smartphone, you’re likely nailed in to a 2-year contract together with your mobile carrier, and a tablet isn’t something you purchase greater than every year – if that. What the PlayStation Mobile rule of three doesn’t account for is the ever-growing multi-device-owning public. Note: PlayStation Mobile isn’t officially out within the USA quite yet, but soon! I shouldn’t be counted as i have more devices out and in of my hands than many people ever touch as a product reviewer – but given the present release schedule for products at below a year between one device and its upgraded version (see: HTC One X+), it is not out of line to imagine persons are switching devices a lot more often than the two-year lock implies. It needs to be then that Sony desires to work inside the old world, one where the assumption of piracy being so important that they limit the devices on which a game could be played for the legitimate multi-device-owning public. And that’s your first-world problem opinion for the day. Do you own greater than three devices that you would love to play an analogous game on? Tell us!
The opinions expressed are those of the writer and don’t necessarily represent those of SlashGear
