Skip to main content

Google officially plans to take on Twitch with new YouTube Gaming site

youtube gaming announcement
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Confirming earlier rumors, YouTube has officially announced YouTube Gaming: a new site and app that could be the first serious challenger to game streaming giant Twitch. Launching this summer in the United Kingdom and United States, YouTube Gaming will combine the live streaming that has made Twitch such an explosive success in the last year with the robust infrastructure that Google has already developed to make YouTube the definitive online video website.

The organizing conceit of YouTube Gaming is that over 25,000 games will have their own hub pages for fans to congregate, combining all of the videos and live streams for a particular game into one place so fans can easily connect and share. Publishers and content creators will also offer their own channels. By subscribing to the channels of games you like, you can receive notifications when new videos are posted or live streams are beginning. Based on your established favorites, the site will be able to make expert recommendations for other games and channels that might interest you, leveraging Google’s massive amounts of data.

YouTube has already started rolling out new live streaming capabilities, offering speeds up to 60 frames per second and features like automatically converting streams into YouTube videos. These streams will be front and center on the YouTube Gaming homepage. With the launch of YouTube Gaming, players will no longer need to schedule live events ahead of time, offering a single, fluid platform through which someone can decide on a whim to play a game, have all of their fans immediately informed that it’s going on, and have it instantly converted to a recorded video for posterity.

Twitch was the breakout success of live streaming video, which found particular traction within the gaming community as eSports also came into its own. After numerous tech giants were rumored to be angling to purchase it, Amazon stepped in and bought the site for nearly $1 billion. Twitch and YouTube Gaming competing is thus a proxy battle between tech giants Amazon and Google, which should give you a sense of how significant a space Silicon Valley luminaries think that game streaming is poised to become. Twitch averaged 100 million unique monthly viewers in 2014, and that number is only going up.

YouTube Gaming is launching at an unspecified time this summer, initially just in the U.S. and U.K. You can sign up to be notified when that happens here.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
You can get a free PC Game Pass subscription via Twitch subscriptions
A gamepad is pictured as a screen displays the online Twitch platform.

Microsoft and Twitch are teaming up to give out free PC Game Pass subscriptions for every Twitch subscription purchase or gift for a limited time. According to a blog post from Twitch, the promotion will last from 10 a.m. PT on November 3 until 3 p.m. PT on November 11.

The promotion works like this: If you buy two of any Twitch subs or gifts, you will get three months of PC Game Pass free of charge. Once you've made your purchase, a code will be sent to your Twitch notifications inbox for you to redeem on the Xbox site. However, you already need to be newly subscribed to PC Game Pass in order to be eligible to receive the code.

Read more
YouTube launched 17 years ago today with this video
Jawed Karim in YouTube's first video in 2005.

It was 17 years ago on Sunday that a 25-year-old guy called Jawed Karim uploaded the first video to YouTube, kickstarting a service that went on to become the go-to hub for video streaming and giving anyone with a camera and a good idea the chance to make a living out of their own content.

The first video was, it has to be said, nothing to write home about. The low-res, 19-second clip (below), called Me at the Zoo, features YouTube co-founder Karim at San Diego Zoo, helpfully pointing out that elephants have remarkably long trunks.

Read more
Let’s Plays are out. The gaming video culture essay is in
ps now vs xbox game pass the last of us remastered

Over the last decade, long-form video essays have grown in popularity -- arguably entering into a boom all their own. Viewers can easily look up a video essay on just about any topic they’d like to, from deep dives into filmmaking, theme park history, fashion, and everything in between. With such a large offering of video essays out there, one sub-genre that has found its own footing is that of the video game culture essay.

These particular gaming videos are a style of visual essay that offers both the creators behind them and viewers the space to explore video games in new ways that extend beyond what we’ve come to expect in a video game review. That flavor of video tends to dig more into a niche topic that the creator is most interested in -- be that a theme, specific character, or even how artistic choices impact the game.

Read more