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PlayStation (Games) Media

Sony Integrates YouTube API for PS3 38

Sony has announced the inclusion of the YouTube API to allow game developers to offer video uploading as an integrated part of their games. The only game that seems to be taking advantage of this so far is Mainichi Issho, a free Japanese PSN game.
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Sony Integrates YouTube API for PS3

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  • Awesome. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Slashdot Suxxors ( 1207082 ) on Friday May 16, 2008 @01:06PM (#23436060)
    Hopefully Microsoft will follow suit with the 360. Too often have I been playing a game of Call of Duty 4, Halo 3, or Gears and you get that "WTF" moment that you wished you could have shared. I realize capture cards and the necessary cables aren't that expensive anymore, but it really is a pain. EA's Skate. had an option for this to, IIRC. But it was on EA's website, not YouTube.
    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by Aranykai ( 1053846 )
      Of course, this might also lead to even greater levels of worthless game footage uploaded to youtube. At least there was a slight technical knowledge required to capture the video, then encode and upload. Now literally anyone can do it.

      Anyways, its still a nifty thing I guess. Go Sony.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by ClamIAm ( 926466 )
        Of course, this might also lead to even greater levels of worthless game footage uploaded to youtube. At least there was a slight technical knowledge required to capture the video, then encode and upload. Now literally anyone can do it.

        I don't think this elitism is really warranted. The fact that somebody has the equipment and knowledge to capture console gameplay videos doesn't mean their videos will be any good. Conversely, someone who can make killer demo videos doesn't really need to know jack about s
      • You're not the one footing Youtube's bandwidth and storage bills so why do you care?
        • You're not the one footing Youtube's bandwidth and storage bills so why do you care?
          Ah, but - if Comcast and the rest of the US ISP industry - we're all indirectly paying for services like YouTube!

          It's bullshit, yes, but I feel like tossing it in. ;)
    • by DarkJC ( 810888 )
      I would've preferred Skate have integrated with YouTube than EAs seemingly shoddily put together site. I didn't try it past launch but it was really slow, and incredibly buggy at the time.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Fumus ( 1258966 )
      This would be good only if it ALWAYS recorded your game. Say it'll keep the last thirty seconds or something around that.
      Most of the time when you have a "WTF" moment it passes before you would get to the recording option.
      By having a backbuffer you could start recording even after that corpse flew out of the window and hit someone, and still capture that funny moment.
      • Re:Awesome. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Slashdot Suxxors ( 1207082 ) on Friday May 16, 2008 @02:00PM (#23437106)
        Then I wish more games were like Halo 3. It automatically records all of your multiplayer sessions to a temporary library (Holds last ~20 sessions, I think.) and then you can flip over to Theater mode to pick and choose what you want to save. From there you can put them on your File Share and store them on your HD. Then you can recommend clips to your friends over Xbox Live and Bungie.net, etc.

        I'm not saying all games should have modes as extensive as this, but auto-saving all of your temporary films would be great.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          Or like Starcraft, which had this maybe ten years before Halo 3. Of course, that game's so old that they decided to save your hard disk space by just recording every action taken and running it through the engine again when you replay a game, so sometimes there are bugs.
          • That's more or less what Halo 3 does, it's not actually a video per se`, but when you save a video clip and re-watch it, you're actually "playing" the game again. It's not an actual video.
            • Got it. Unfortunately, while you can get 3rd-party tools to watch Starcraft replays made with different engines (old patches, and such) I'm guessing it's rather harder to do that for Halo 3. On the bright side, that lets you change perspective and such without saving a multi-gigabyte file for a ten-minute game.
    • Halo 3 already has that. Granted, it's not Youtube, but you can definitely capture WTF moments. I wish that was something that was integrated into all games.
    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      Hopefully Microsoft will follow suit with the 360.
      Of course with Microsoft IM Blocking YouTube Links [slashdot.org] you shouldn't hold your breath on doing this for the Xbox.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Khuffie ( 818093 )
        Erm, that was pretty much corrected the same day it was reported on. Clearly it was an error by some programmer somewhere that has been fixed, but of course, you can continue trolling.
  • by Asmor ( 775910 ) on Friday May 16, 2008 @01:26PM (#23436422) Homepage
    They're going to patent kittens, and then put rootkits on 'em.
    • They're going to patent kittens, and then put rootkits on 'em.
      I've got one of these cats I think. Ever since I got her things keep breaking and if I put a shiny prefix on an object it disappears.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    This fits in with the much broader Sony user generated content plans:

    * User created levels for games Little Big Planet. Early versions of games ship with the game developer's own levels and then users create and upload their own levels that are made available to other PS3 owners with ratings and download counts to tell which are the best levels. Later on game developers come out with updated BluRay versions of their game with the disc filled with all the most popular levels.

    * Ingame screenshots and movies.

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