GDC Mobile: Nokia - 'new paradigm for gameplay'
Mobile keynote from handset firm's EVP of markets addresses converged media and gaming.
The chameleonic nature of both Nokia and the mobile games market and how they enable new kinds of gameplay, were the subject of Nokia's EVP of markets Anssi Vanjoki's keynote opening the second day of the GDC Mobile element of the Game Developers Conference.
Talking of a "world where everyone is connected", Vanjoki offered a broad overview of the future of mobile and its interconnectivity with the web and how it enables new ways to make, share and play games.
He began with an overview of the mobile sector as it stands, ponting out that "never in the history of mankind has there been a consumer product as durable as the phone" and echoing comments from Gameloft boss Michel Guillemot the day before by predicting a global installed base for the mobile phone of four billion globally by 2010.
Nokia claims around a billion of those handsets, and via its research Vanjoki said the company had identified a key part of its many customers - 200 million 'technology leaders' who are dictating the future of mobile via their use of advanced handsets by Nokia and its rivals. He called them "the hotspot of the consumer electronics and IT revolution", adding that everyone in this category is exploiting the various functions of mobile because "it's with you all the time and is active 24/7".
For those users only 12 per cent of usage is for voice functions, with browsing eight per cent. Games use was four per cent, messaging 37 per cent and multimedia 16 per cent. WiFi use is a third of data (31 per cent) transfers, which Vanjoki said was "interesting because this is the fast and open channel, not dominated by cellular system".
With this in mind, he said it was clear mobile devices had become "a multimedia computer that lets people be present in the internet all the time" and has become a primary interface for the internet and social networks.
He added that it was proof that the internet was beginning to move beyond Web 2.0 to 'Web NG' (as in next-gen), "a contextual presence where we are extending our souls to be part of the online experience".
For games, he added: "Web NG will allow for gaming new experience where we mix and mash up reality with virtuality.
"Much more participation with content made as the game is being played by the people playing the game. A whole new world of creativity waiting for us."
Web and mobile has become a tool to "annotate everything we do via connectivity" he added, showing examples of GPS and photo sharing. "Think what that is bringing into the game context," he said.
Nokia has researched this category, he added, saying the firm's explorations have been varied.
Комментарии: 0:
Отправить комментарий
Подпишитесь на каналы Комментарии к сообщению [Atom]
<< Главная страница