Tag Archives: EA Play

Game Pass Vs. The New PS Plus, The Comparison We Had To Make

Image: Sony / Microsoft / Kotaku

Two months ago, Sony reimagined PS Plus, its longtime membership program for PlayStation owners. Now, it looks a whole lot like Microsoft’s Game Pass: For roughly the same amount of money, both offer access to a Netflix-style games-on-demand library. Obviously, we had to stack the two services up against each other.


Price

Game Pass is available as a subscription for console, PC, or both. The two separated tiers cost $10 a month. Xbox Live Ultimate, which joins the two and provides access to the EA Play Library (a similar games-on-demand service) and Xbox Live Gold, costs $15 a month. There is no way to pay for multiple months or a year up front at a tiered markdown (at least officially).

PS Plus is also available for a subscription, but it gets very complicated very fast. There are two new tiers. The Extra is $15 a month, or $100 for the year, and offers free monthly games, online play, and a catalog of on-demand games including some of Ubisoft’s library. Premium is $18 a month, or $120 a year, and adds access to classic games, game trials, and cloud streaming for most of the games in the library. That’s a huge price difference, and while PS Plus Premium is more expensive month-to-month, it’s actually almost 50 percent cheaper if you commit to the whole year.

Winner: PS Plus


Streaming

Game Pass allows for cloud-streaming, provided you pay for the pricier Ultimate tier. The streaming functionality is technically still “in beta,” but it is for all intents and purposes up and running. Microsoft recommends internet speeds of at least 10mbps for mobile devices and 20mbps for consoles and PCs. Based on Kotaku’s testing, it’s…fine? Despite cloud gaming’s huge advancements recently, streaming still can’t compete with downloaded games. The latency, however minor, is unignorable. As such, cloud gaming is best used for puzzlers, chill RPGs, light platformers, and other games that don’t demand split-second reflexes.

Microsoft says “more than 100” games are currently streamable via cloud gaming on Xbox Game Pass, but more games are added every few weeks. Right now, the Game Pass library currently lists 381 games as capable of streaming.

Stray.
Screenshot: Annapurna / Kotaku

To unlock streaming on PS Plus you need to buy the $18 a month tier. And even then, the streaming quality is nothing to write home about. At best, it’s as good as Xbox Cloud Gaming. Sometimes it’s worse. Roughly 320 games from the Premium library can be streamed on console or PC, and a good chunk of those are PS3 games and classics rather than the full PlayStation 4 library. For example, Marvel’s Avengers and Stray are available on console but not in the streaming library.

Most notably, you can’t stream PS Plus games to your phone. For now, the service relies on Remote Play, meaning you need a console to play on mobile and you must be on the same WiFi network.

Winner: Game Pass


Game Library

Of course, a games-on-demand service is only as good as the one thing it’s supposed to provide: games.

Right now, the Xbox Game Pass library has about 475 games, but that tally comprises the library across both tiers, including the 92 games currently part of EA Play. The main draw, of course, is that Microsoft puts its entire first-party portfolio on the platform. That also includes the major tent poles—like Halo Infinite and Forza Horizon 5, alongside forthcoming blockbusters like Starfield and Redfall—which become available the day they came out. Third-party games tend to stick around for a year at most, though some, like Rockstar’s open-world Hold ‘Em simulator Red Dead Redemption 2, become unavailable after a matter of months. It’s unpredictable.

Halo Infinite.
Screenshot: 343 Industries

The library also regularly cycles in third-party games and often serves as a launch pad for indie gems. This year alone, the twee Zelda-like Tunic, the snowboarding sim Shredders, and the puzzler-cum-dungeon-crawler Loot River all launched on Game Pass. (Here’s Kotaku’s list of the best under-the-radar games currently available.) Developers have acknowledged to Kotaku that debuting on Game Pass cuts into initial sales but is ultimately worth it for the tradeoff in publicity.

PS Plus Extra currently includes around 430 PS4 and PS5 games, while Premium adds another 395 from PS1, PS2, PS3 (streaming only), and PSP. While the classics are a nice bonus, the biggest draw by far are the PlayStation exclusives like Horizon Zero Dawn, God of War, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, and Bloodborne. Unlike Microsoft, Sony has committed to not putting its newest releases on the service day-and-date, and if Returnal arriving a year after release is any indication, it seems like a good bet that players will have to wait at least a year to 18 months before newer stuff appears.

There are plenty of strong contenders in the third-party department though. Games like Final Fantasy VII Remake, Prey, Control, Doom, and Tetris Effect are all present, as are indies like Celeste, Outer Wilds, Dead Cells, and Virginia. The library has plenty of diversity and was bolstered most recently from the same-day addition of Stray, which is already a 2022 GOTY contender. The Ubisoft component, led by Assassin’s Creed Valhalla is also a strong compliment. At the same time, Sony hasn’t yet demonstrated it is, or will be, as aggressive as Microsoft in courting a steady stream of third party day-and-date additions. There’s also no PC-exclusive portion of the library.

Winner: PS Plus


Ari: Going into this exercise, I totally imagined it’d paint a clear picture of Game Pass superiority, but these two services seem fundamentally identical to me—right down to the UI—with Sony’s new version of PS Plus marginally better in the few aspects that matter. The prices are mostly the same, but the option to pay for a year of PS Plus at a “discount” edges out Game Pass in that regard. Sure, Game Pass’ big draw is that it puts Microsoft’s first-party games on the service at launch, but…Microsoft barely has any first-party games out this year! Right now, that perk seems like little more than a marketing line.

Ethan: I also thought Game Pass would be the clear winner coming out of this, but now I’m conflicted as well. Not everyone can afford to pay for a full year up front, but it really changes the calculus in this matchup. There are some other key differences as well, and while I don’t think they make one a clear winner over the other, I do think it makes it easier to decide which you want to pay for. Want immediate access to a meaty back catalog of some of the biggest and best games from the last generation? PS Plus wins. Want to stay current on some of the best new games coming out every month and play them at any time on your phone? Then it’s Game Pass all the way.

 

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Xbox Game Pass June 2022 Adds TMNT, Far Cry 5

Screenshot: Ubisoft

Xbox Game Pass has had a rocky few months, seeing it lose major games and failing to add marquee additions to plug the gaps. But on the heels of Xbox’s big marketing blitz—including a promise that 50 games will hit Xbox over the next year, many on Game Pass—the popular games-on-demand service is picking up steam.

Here’s everything coming to Game Pass through the rest of the month, plus two games that were quietly added over the long weekend.

June 16

  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge (Cloud, Console, PC)

June 17

  • Omori (Cloud, Console, PC)

June 21

  • Shadowrun Trilogy (Cloud, Console)
  • Total War: Three Kingdoms (PC)

June 23

  • FIFA 22, via EA Play (Console, PC)
  • Naraka: Bladepoint (Cloud, Console, PC)

July 1

  • Far Cry 5 (Cloud, Console, PC)

The (Microsoft Edge)lords giveth, and they taketh away, so the following games will be unavailable as of June 30:

  • FIFA 20, via EA Play (Console, PC)
  • Jurassic World Evolution (Console Cloud)
  • Last Stop (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • MotoGP 20 (Cloud, Console, PC)

All told, it’s a solid crop. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge is easily the beat-’em-up of the year, a lovely homage to genre classics that folds in modernized sensibilities. Omori, an acclaimed turn-based RPG with status effects based on emotions, has been out on PC for a few years, and makes its way to console via Game Pass. (It’s also out on Switch.) Both are already live, and worth checking out.

My bosses have forced me via blood oath to check out Shadowrun, so while I can’t personally recommend it, I have been told to pass the word on: It’s good.

The games on the horizon are nothing to write off, either. Far Cry 5 might be the worst modern Far Cry, but the gap between “good” and “bad” Far Cry isn’t very wide. Naraka: Bladepoint is a moderately popular parkour-based battle royale; it’ll presumably see its audience expand with the leap to console (just watch out for the bots). It’s unclear yet whether or not a lineup like this is enough to stem reported subscription churn—or to head off competition from Sony’s now-competing PS Plus service—but it’s a solid start.

 

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Game Pass Gets Vampire Survivors, One Of 2022’s Best Games

Image: Poncle

Sony might have made a splash with its recently-detailed PS Plus revamp, but Game Pass continues to grow its library. The park-builder Jurassic World Evolution 2 is obviously a main draw and—bonus!—out today. Later this week, Game Pass will also get one of the best games of the year: Vampire Survivors. Here’s everything coming to Xbox Game Pass in the coming weeks:

May 17

  • Her Story (PC)
  • Jurassic World Evolution 2 (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Little Witch in the Woods (Console, PC)
  • Skate, via EA Play (Cloud)
  • Umurangi Generation Special Edition (Cloud, Console, PC)

May 19

  • Farming Simulator 22 (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Vampire Survivors (PC)

May 24

  • Floppy Knights (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Hardspace: Shipbreaker (PC)

May 26

  • Sniper Elite 5 (Console, PC)

May 27

  • Cricket 22 (PC)
  • Pac-Man Museum+ (Cloud, Console, PC)

Jurassic World Evolution 2—which, fun fact, was announced by Jeff Goldblum himself at last year’s Summer Game Fest—is the follow-up to one of the quietly-excellent planning games of 2018. Despite its many variables and room for creative designs, Jurassic World Evolution was a little clunky and lacked details. But the thrill of designing a park for freakin’ dinosaurs was unmatched. Fans say the sequel plays like a more robust, polished version of the first one. Vampire Survivors, meanwhile, is a can’t-miss top-down bullet hell with clear Castlevania inspiration. It is tough, but like the best roguelikes, you get better and better without even realizing it, until you eventually become unstoppable. Really hard to put down.

As ever, Game Pass can’t add without taking away. The following go away at the end of the month:

  • EA Sports NHL 20 (Console)
  • Farming Simulator 19 (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Knockout City (Console, PC) EA Play
  • Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • SpellForce 3: Soul Harvest (PC)
  • Superhot: Mind Control Delete (Cloud, Console, PC)
  • Yes, Your Grace (Cloud, Console, PC)

Most curious here is the imminent departure of Knockout City, the dodgeball-themed competitive arena game that was played by a gazillion people and then instantly lost its steam. In February, developer Velan Studios announced it would take the Rocket League approach and make the game free-to-play. Velan also said it will start self-publishing the game, assuming responsibilities from EA, which has been the game’s publisher so far. Representatives for Velan Studios told Kotaku that character progression will carry over seamlessly, and anyone who played via Game Pass will get a handful of free cosmetics.

Update: 5/17/22 11:05 a.m. ET: This article was updated to include a comment from Velan Studios.

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PS Plus Game FIFA 22 Appears to Be Targeting EA Play with Battlefield 2042 on PS5, PS4

With the end of the football season approaching, and the frightening prospect of Liverpool winning a quadruple – save our souls, Karim Benzema! – it seems like EA Sports wants to get FIFA 22 in as many hands as humanly possible. The game, one of All PS Plus Games for May 2022, also appears to be joining EA Play’s subscription service on PS5 and PS4.

Speculation comes courtesy of some updated Microsoft Store listings, where the soccer simulation has been tagged with an Xbox Game Pass logo. It’s worth pointing out that any Electronic Arts titles added to the Redmond firm’s subscription service is usually part of EA Play, which is bundled in with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate.

EA Play is, of course, also available on both the PS5 and PS4, so you may have multiple ways to play FIFA 22 starting next week. Interestingly, failed first-person shooter Battlefield 2042 is also expected to be added to the service, which is incredibly early considering the title launched roughly six months ago and has yet to receive its first season of content.

If you want to know what other games are available, you can find All EA Play Games on PS5, PS4 through the link.



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EA Cancels Its Big Summer Announcement Event, EA Play Live

Image: EA

First kicking off in 2016, Electronic Arts has traditionally used the week of E3 in early June to hold its own EA Play Live event, during which the publisher would make many of its biggest announcements for the year. That’s coming to an end in 2022.

EA has decided to cancel this year’s event, in favour of what sounds like holding smaller showcases focused on each new and upcoming game individually. In a statement sent to IGN, the publisher says:

We love EA Play Live as it’s our way of connecting with our players and sharing what’s new with all of you. However, this year things aren’t lining up to show you everything on one date. We have exciting things happening at our world-class studios and this year we’ll reveal much more about these projects when the time is right for each of them. We look forward to spending time with you throughout the year!

The move is hardly a surprise. Last year’s EA Play Live skipped E3 entirely and went down a few weeks later in July, and with E3 itself looking like a non-starter this year there was little impetus for EA to keep to that traditional announcement schedule.

That’s…presumably fine for most of you, I guess? I can’t ever remember a year that people got hyped for EA’s announcements at E3, or even EA Play Live, as a lot of the publisher’s big announcements were already being made on their own timelines.

It’s pretty grim news for anyone still clinging to a love of the old-fashioned E3/summer announcement season, though. EA Play Live was only invented because E3 was running out of steam, so for EA Play Live itself to get binned says a lot about how dead that old “here’s all our new stuff in one place!” trend seems to be in 2022.

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PC Game Pass Could Come To Steam In The Future, Valve CEO Says

Image: Microsoft

Game Pass is currently one of the best deals in gaming. For $15 a month you get access to a rotating list of 100s of games, from small indies like Unpacking to big blockbusters like Halo: Infinite. You can play them on Xbox or PC, or stream them just about anywhere else. Valve CEO Gabe Newell now says he wouldn’t be opposed to having it come to Steam.

Newell was asked in a new interview by PC Gamer whether Valve has any plans to role out a competing subscription service of his own. Maybe even call it something like Steam Pass. The former Microsoft employee said no.

“I don’t think it’s something that we think we need to do ourselves, building a subscription service at this time,” Newell said. “But for their customers it’s clearly a popular option, and we’d be more than happy to work with them to get that on Steam.”

While it doesn’t sound like there are any current plans in the works to put Game Pass on Steam, both companies have spoken “quite a bit about the topic.” “If your customers want it, then you should figure out how to make it happen,” Newell told PC Gamer. “That’s where we’re at.”

Photo: Valve

Microsoft has made clear that one of its big goals is getting as many people to sign up for Game Pass as possible. It’s ongoing acquisition spree, including Bethesda and Activision Blizzard, is one big part of that. Having Game Pass available on competing storefronts could be another.

While the company used to hide PC versions of its games behind the Microsoft Store, it’s recently been bringing them day-and-date to Steam. It’s turned out to be a huge boon for live service games like Sea of Thieves which have seen their player numbers explode after becoming available on Valve’s storefront.

The newly launched Steam Deck portable console is technically already Game Pass capable. Though Microsoft’s subscription service doesn’t support the device’s native Linux-based SteamOS, the Steam Deck can, in theory at least, dual-boot Windows 10, allowing prospective owners to switch between Steam and PC Game Pass.

Of course, one big obstacle to Game Pass coming to Steam proper is revenue sharing. Microsoft gets 100% of what subscribers pay when they use it through the Xbox launcher, while Valve traditionally takes a 30% cut of everything sold through Steam. As The Verge points out, this is likely why only the base tier of EA’s subscription service is on Steam while EA Play Pro remains exclusive to its Origin launcher.

Still, it’s surprising that Valve seems so open to working through issues like that in the first place. The value proposition of Game Pass, supported by Microsoft’s deep pockets and increasing leverage in the games industry, has the potential to completely disrupt marketplaces like the PlayStation Store and Nintendo eShop were it ever allowed on those rival platforms. Valve doesn’t seem to feel the same way about its own.

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Battlefield 2042 Early Access Crashing Xbox Series X Consoles

Image: EA

Although the latest installment in the Battlefield series officially launches on November 19, folks who doled out extra money to play Battlefield 2042 early say the game won’t stop crashing on Xbox Series X.

“I’m just playing a few minutes, sometimes an hour and suddenly my whole Xbox shuts down,” reads a post pinned to the top of the Battlefield 2042 technical issues forum.

Since yesterday afternoon, the thread has accrued over 100 replies, the vast majority of which come from other Battlefield 2042 players describing the same problems. Some point out that the crashes have been a consistent issue since the game unlocked, while others mention they can only play for a few minutes before suffering another console-crashing bug.

EA community reps seem to be doing everything they can to help frustrated players in the thread, but the potential solutions they’ve provided—simple things like making sure the console’s firmware is up to date—haven’t stemmed the tide of complaints. And similar stories are starting to pop up elsewhere, with many pointing out that the issue was prevalent in the beta as well.

“Played a couple of matches with my buddies,” explained one r/Battlefield2042 user. “Then the next match, I wasn’t having issues for maybe 10 mins then boom, Xbox Series X completely shut off.”

“This seriously needs to be addressed,” wrote another. “When you can’t finish a game and your whole console turns off, it’s bad.”

“I did not pay $120 just to have the game crash me back to the dashboard every single match,” said a third.

That’s right, Battlefield 2042 early access costs extra. Whether it’s via pre-orders of the Gold and Ultimate Edition bundles ($89.99 and $109.99 respectively) or an active EA Play Pro membership ($14.99/month or $99.99/year), the players currently experiencing these crashing issues are the dedicated fans who were willing to pay more for the seven-day head-start.

While there are singular reports of similar issues on other platforms, Xbox Series X owners appear to be the most affected by a sizable margin.

EA declined to comment when contacted by Kotaku about this ongoing situation.

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Skate 4 Won’t Be At EA Play 2021

Screenshot: EA

EA announced today that the next Skate game, which is currently in development, won’t be shown during EA Play 2021 on July 22. It’s another game to add to the growing list of “Stuff That Won’t Be At EA Play 2021.”

The next Skate game, which doesn’t have an official name yet, is in too early a stage of development to show off to the world, according to a tweet posted on the official EA Skate Twitter account. In the message, the devs behind the game explained that they formed a new studio in January and hired a bunch of “super-talented people” to help make the game. Since then, the studio has been hard at work on the next Skate game. But the team and the game aren’t ready for “prime time” just yet and will be skipping EA Play 2021 on Thursday.

“It’s still early and we are committed to doing this thing right which means it’s gonna take some time,” explained EA and the devs in the tweet announcing the no-show.

However, some good news: While the next Skate is skipping the upcoming event, the devs promise a “little something” will be shared with fans tomorrow, July 19. Most likely a teaser, possibly revealing the name of the game. That would be nice, it would mean I could stop calling it “The Next Skate Game” and start calling it Skate 4 or whatever.

This new Skate game was first announced back in June 2020 with a very brief video and no other details. Fans had long wanted a new Skate game and have been asking for it for years. The last game in the series, Skate 3, was released back in 2010.

This latest confirmation of another game skipping EA Play 2021 makes me wonder what will be shown at the event. Bioware confirmed that there won’t be any Mass Effect or Dragon Age news at EA Play and EA also confirmed no new Star Wars games will be revealed either. Reports earlier this month have seemingly revealed that a new Dead Space game, developed by EA Motive, will be at EA Play 2021.

Beyond that? Seems a safe bet that more Battlefield 2042 news will be shared during the event. And who knows, maybe some new games too. EA Play 2021 takes place on July 22.

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