iPhone Gaming

Mobile gaming has always, despite the best efforts of a few pioneering developers, been the black sheep of the market. Those who own consoles, PCs and handhelds tend to look down their noses at any attempt to shift the hobby onto mobile phones - and not without some justification.

We’ve all enjoyed the odd game of Snake to pass a few dull minutes, but it still didn’t sit well with most gamers when Nokia tried to claim that it was one of the world’s most successful gaming companies as a result. Mobile phone hardware has traditionally been awful for games - dreadful controls, weak graphical abilities and uncooperative operating systems have made for terrible user experiences. Even gaming-focused mobile phones like the N-Gage have turned out to be high-profile flops, with a winning combination of phone and gaming features proving elusive.

It’s not just the hardware that makes mobile gaming into a minefield, though. There’s also the distribution network - a byzantine maze that mostly seems designed to raise prices by diverting big slices of revenue to meaningless middlemen, while simultaneously making it practically impossible for half-decent games to get in front of consumers. Not that anything ever really gets in front of consumers, since the process of finding, paying for, downloading and installing a mobile game remains one best suited to those with infinite patience and a love of obscure puzzles.

In short, mobile gaming is a bit rubbish, and its promise of providing another platform for games - one with a broad reach and a huge installed base - has never been delivered upon. Moreover, the hurdles standing in the way of mobile gaming’s ascendancy don’t look easy to overcome. Recalcitrant networks, a convoluted path to market, hidden data charges, awful distribution methods, dreadful control methods, hundreds of handsets of varying gaming prowess to support - not, surely, a landscape that’s going to change any time soon.

'iPhone Gaming' Screenshot 1

Developers are still finding their feet on the new platform - mostly by experimenting with casual games.

Except that it did change - and it changed because of a company that hasn’t traditionally been any kind of friend to videogames. Apple’s iPhone has shifted the landscape of mobile gaming dramatically, suddenly - and probably mostly by accident. In attempting to build a hardware platform and a distribution network for its new mobile phone, Apple has coincidentally created the most interesting new entry to the videogames market in several years.

Before we start talking about the iPhone as a gaming device, let’s make one thing clear - this isn’t going to be a debate about the relative merits of the iPhone itself. We’re sure many of you are delighted with your present phone, desperately in love with Symbian, and would happily marry Windows Mobile if only it were a real person. All of this is fine, and it’s not what we’re here to talk about.

However, to ignore the potential impact of the iPhone on the phone market as a whole would be as ignorant and foolish as those who dismissed the iPod (and, closer to home, the Nintendo DS and the Wii). The same stars are in alignment for the iPhone as for its older sibling. It’s got a slick, appealing and supremely user-friendly interface, a hugely attractive physical appearance, straightforward connectivity with your computer (which will be a first for most phone users, who have never previously even tried to connect to their PC) and, of course, fantastic marketing and media exposure. Never underestimate the importance of that last factor to Apple’s success.

As a hardware platform, iPhone is a success already. Before the launch of the latest version of the phone, it had an installed base of over six million units. Estimates suggest that in the weeks since launch, the iPhone 3G has sold three million units - bringing the total installed base to over nine million in under a year. (This doesn’t even count healthy sales of the iPod touch, which can also run much of the software that’s aimed at iPhone.)

IPhone has even managed to crack a notoriously difficult market - Japan. In the month of its launch there, the iPhone drove a mass exodus of phone users to exclusive provider SoftBank Mobile. Rival KDDI saw its subscriber numbers fall for the first time in its history as a result. If the trend continues, Apple will enjoy something many games companies covet - a thriving installed base in North America, Europe and the Far East alike.

'iPhone Gaming' Screenshot 2

The iPhone can apparently run a full version of Spore,which will hopefully release this Spetember.

As a software - and a gaming - platform, however, iPhone is in its infancy. Until a few weeks ago, it was strictly a closed system. Unless you cracked your phone, no third-party apps would run. Now, however, Apple has opened up the platform with the launch of the App Store, an online distribution system for iPhone and iPod touch applications (including games) which allows developers to set their own prices and upload their applications directly, with only a brief quality control system in place to ensure that applications don’t break the phones on which they’re installed.

In its first month, the App Store has seen about two million software downloads a day. The bulk of those are free - but the store still turns over around USD 1 million in revenue a day from its paid applications. That amounts to over USD 350 million in annual revenues, and can be expected to run a lot higher than that as more users come onboard and more developers start working on the platform. Apple boss Steve Jobs expects to see the App Store becoming a half-billion dollar marketplace “soon” - and reckons that its growth could eventually propel it past the billion-dollar mark.

Using the App Store, unlike almost every other mobile gaming experience, is straightforward and intuitive. It can be browsed either on your PC (applications you download are synced to the iPhone next time you plug it in) or on the phone itself. For the most part, you’ll discover applications by searching for specific things, or by using the fairly comprehensive user review and rating system to allow great applications to “float” to the top of the lists.

One touch of a button and the application or game is downloaded and automatically installed, ready for use. Apple bills your credit card directly and emails you an invoice within 24 hours, and there are no data charges - so no nasty surprises on your phone bill at the end of the month.

The advantage for developers is obvious. Not all iPhone users are interested in playing games, of course - PCs have the same problem, in that it’s impossible to get a sensible figure for the installed base, because so many of them are bought for offices and the likes. However, the simple fact remains that for the first time, game developers have a mobile platform which is as open to developers as the PC, and which has a built-in Steam-style digital distribution system with a healthy revenue sharing model (70 per cent goes to the developer).

Moreover, it’s actually quite an appealing platform for games. There’s no way we’d have said that a few years ago, we confess - but the DS and the Wii have forced us to recognise that not every game is going to need a D-Pad and face buttons to be playable. What the iPhone brings to the table in place of buttons is a motion sensor (not dissimilar to Sony’s Sixaxis technology in practice) and a multi-touch screen, which can register and track multiple fingers moving on the screen at once. In addition, it’s got a built-in camera, GPS, and internet access - and, of course, access to your music library, which some rhythm games are already using to good effect.

'iPhone Gaming' Screenshot 3

Two million downloads a day isn’t a bad start.

The limits of what can be done with this technology will take years to explore, but the potential is vast. From the existing library of genres, it’s obvious that puzzle games, strategy games, board games, word games, rhythm games and their ilk will all translate to the platform rather nicely. Curiosities such as flOw would play very well on iPhone, too - and while promising early examples like Monkey Ball fall slightly short (see our review), they have enough merit to draw some praise and have performed well enough to encourage their parents to make a greater effort going forward.

More importantly, there’s potential for games that break existing conventions completely. The things developers could do with GPS, a camera, an internet connection and the assumption that you’re mobile and moving around are limited only by imagination - and thanks to the lack of conventional controls, we’ll hopefully see plenty of that imagination, and not so much in the way of cheap, tacky ports.

Equally, the iPhone is no slouch when it comes to processing power. Estimates from developers suggest that it probably packs about as much punch as the PSP - which puts a bit of a dampener on Sony’s rumoured ambition to launch a phone based on the PSP hardware in the future. Despite this, the unique nature of the platform means that there is an opportunity for small teams (even just a coder and an artist, as id Software’s John Carmack recently suggested) to make big hits.

We’re not going to engage in speculation about whether iPhone could be a “PSP-killer”, let alone a “DS-killer”. It’s neither of those things, and it never will be. What it could be, though, is a “killer” for the ambitions of many firms in the mobile gaming business - and simultaneously, the saviour of mobile gaming itself. IPhone is everything that mobile gaming should have been for years. It’s easy and accessible to develop for, and teams can take their creations directly to the public via the App Store without having to navigate the murky world of content aggregators and network operators. It’s powerful, it’s feature-packed and it’s got a control system that could drive innovation and originality. Moreover, it’s cool, it’s popular, and it’s heavily marketed.

'iPhone Gaming' Screenshot 4

Apple’s generous profit distibution is encouraging developers.

Right now, of course, it’s waiting for killer apps - but it may not be waiting for long. Freeware rhythm game Tap Tap Revenge has already seen a million downloads on iPhone, and there’s talk of a commercial version full of licensed music. Other software by small teams is riding high in the charts - and some larger publishers saw multi-million dollar revenues from their games on iPhone in the first weekend on sale, with estimates placing Super Monkey Ball at the top of the revenue chart with over USD 4 million in sales.

The signs are clear. After years of turning up our noses, we could all be playing games on mobile phones sooner than anyone expected. We wouldn’t advise anyone to take the plunge on an iPhone for gaming purposes right now - but if the device really lives up to its potential, this could be the most exciting (and unexpected) newcomer to the games market for years.

Article by Rob Fahey

If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Comments

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

(required)

(required)