Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Media PC Games (Games) The Internet Games Entertainment

Steam Broadcasting Now Open To Everyone 93

jones_supa writes: The beta test phase of Steam Broadcasting feature has been completed. It is now available to everyone by updating the client to the newest version. The feature allows users to watch and stream games to and from users on your friends list. Right-clicking the name of a friend who is in-game offers the option to "Watch Game." This will send a request which needs to be accepted by the player so that the spectator can hop in. A chat is also included. Steam Broadcasting was first announced late last year as an alternative to third-party streaming services like Twitch, Ustream and Hitbox.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Steam Broadcasting Now Open To Everyone

Comments Filter:
  • with Steamcast? http://www.steamcast.com/ [steamcast.com]

  • by preflex ( 1840068 ) on Tuesday January 20, 2015 @04:39PM (#48859557)

    I've found Steam's broadcasting feature to be quite handy for getting a handle on the basic mechanics of games with a steep learning curve, such as Crusader Kings II. If you tell a player you're watching him for the purposes of learning the game, he will often slow down and explain his actions.

    I also like to watch FTL. It's fun to be a back-seat starship captain, and many of the players like it too, as having an extra set of eyes and ears can be helpful for catching things you might overlook: "Uhh, dude ... Your ship is on fire ... ".

    • It's fun to be a back-seat starship captain, and many of the players like it too, as having an extra set of eyes and ears can be helpful for catching things you might overlook:

      I'm a back seat minecrafter. Just watching guys randomly mine caves without any organization, or collecting wood at night...outside, or not having any walls just makes me scream.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Jupix ( 916634 )

      It's also well implemented. I tried the beta with a friend a few days before the final release. It has a way shorter delay than Twitch, about 8-10 seconds only (last time I broadcast with Twitch, the delay was something like double that). It was also very stable and bandwidth-efficient, both for the broadcaster and the viewer. It didn't stop to buffer even once during our test stream which was on full quality (I think about 3000kbps - a very nice quality 1080p gamestream). Both of us were on quite normal br

  • Pointless (Score:5, Insightful)

    by damicatz ( 711271 ) on Tuesday January 20, 2015 @04:39PM (#48859567)

    It isn't open to everyone. It doesn't support any web browsers other than Chrome and Windows 8Internet Explorer. They won't be competing with Twitch anytime soon with those restrictions.

    • And you're prohibited from using Chrome because...?

      • Not going to switch to another browser for one website.

        • So use it for all websites. Chrome is likely better than whatever you're currently using.
          • by vux984 ( 928602 )

            So use it for all websites. Chrome is likely better than whatever you're currently using.

            Why are you here? Got nobody to talk to on G+ ?

            Seriously. I have no interest whatsoever in using Chrome for anything, let alone everything. I just don't like Google THAT much... or at all really, when you get right down to it.

        • So you're complaining that it isn't open to everyone because it doesn't support a browser that you like to use, even though you have complete freedom to use a browser which is supported by the site at zero cost to yourself. Zero.

          As an alternative you can just use the Steam client itself, which supports everything you need.

          That isn't Steam locking people out. That's you locking yourself out for no reason other than pure stubbornness and a need to bitch about a free service.

    • what OS cant run chrome???
      • by dj245 ( 732906 )

        what OS cant run chrome???

        With each new release, my low-powered devices get even more sluggish with Chrome. My Lenovo Tablet 10 [lenovo.com] is a speedy little tablet- everything on the tablet is fast. Except when I open up more than 4 or 5 tabs in Chrome. The memory usage and high CPU usage (when idle / not loading pages) is getting completely out of hand.

        I have 4 tabs open right now -Random webpage 38mb ram, Gmail 147mb ram, Facebook 112mb ram, this window 135mb ram. Add the "GPU Process" at 195MB ram, and the "browser process" at 177MB

      • /me waits for edge case obsessed Tepples to start talking about game consoles that can't run Chrome.

        And non-x86 Linuxes can't run Chrome! Would Someone Think of The Edge Cases!

        I did actually check the site in the PS4 web browser, just in case Steam thought it was Chrome or something.

        • /me waits for edge case obsessed Tepples to start talking about game consoles that can't run Chrome.

          What about people who don't want to run Chrome? Or who only run Chrome within the google app space?

      • There's a difference between "I can't" and "I won't."

        I fall squarely in the "I won't" camp. I just don't like it, and everything I don't like about my current browser seems to have been inspired by Chrome.

    • It's built into the Steam client, and is primarily a private client-to-client "broadcast". You request to watch a friend, the friend accepts, now you're watching his or her game.

      Web viewership for public streams is just a bonus because they built it around h.264 video segments and Chrome and IE11 can play those back with a bit of javascript work.

      • It's built into the Steam client, and is primarily a private client-to-client "broadcast".

        Reading up, it works like Share Play does on the PS4, except without the actual control sharing.

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      It doesn't support any web browsers other than Chrome and Windows 8Internet Explorer. They won't be competing with Twitch anytime soon with those restrictions.

      Mean-while over here I think twitch only work in IE for whatever reason (Adblock, Flash, .. Actually I think some maybe FlashBlock white list thing fixed it?) .. anyway. Why it doesn't work here isn't important. It's likely up to my configuration.

      What's more important is that it seem to require Flash at least.

      So yeah.. so much for "Oh but it requires .."

      (Codec thing? Didn't Firefox get H.264 support by Cisco or something?)

    • by eWarz ( 610883 )
      They won't be competing with Twitch anyway. Alongside an average 20% drop in framerate across most games (tested with: Radeon 6970, Geforce GTX 750 ti, and others, including onboard AMD/intel graphics.) it tends to be rather buggy (friends frequently get bumped from streams), has next to no marketshare (everyone uses twitch), and no opportunity for revenue generation. In the mean time, OBS runs near flawlessly (no noticeable framerate decrease on most machines), supports several different streaming platf
    • It's not meant to compete with Twitch. It's meant to be a single button streaming for ease of use. It does what it says on the tin and nothing else.

      Why must it compete with Twitch?

  • by CronoCloud ( 590650 ) <cronocloudauron.gmail@com> on Tuesday January 20, 2015 @06:01PM (#48860361)

    While you can watch streams on Linux and OSX, you can't broadcast with those OS's, not yet anyway. Minecraft's built in streaming doesn't work on Linux either, and Linux users still don't have that promised OBS port.

  • I thought it said "Steampunk" broadcasting... ;-(

To do nothing is to be nothing.

Working...