YouTube is wading confidently into turf dominated by Amazon-owned Twitch, with a service tailored for the hot trend of videogame play as a spectator sport.
The globally popular online video-sharing service provided industry insiders an early look at YouTube Gaming at an Electronic Entertainment Expo extravaganza that ends Thursday in Los Angeles.
"Having a destination where you can get all the gaming content you care about is really important," YouTube head of gaming partnerships Ryan Wyatt told AFP as he demonstrated the soon-to-be-launched venue for live or on-demand video focused on gaming.
"That is why we created this."
Billions of hours of video related to gaming are watched monthly at YouTube, from "walk-through" clips showing players how to handle challenges, to comedic commentary and in-game action, according to Wyatt.
The online arena for video game channels incorporates the search smarts of Google, which owns YouTube, to surface fresh or must-see content.
- Billions of game-watching hours -
The potential audience for YouTube Gaming is huge given that hundreds of millions of people seek out videogame-related content at the service.
"We are doing billions of hours of watch time in gaming," Wyatt said. "There should be a lot of traction going into this."
YouTube Gaming will debut in Britain and the United States in the coming months, featuring on-demand video as well as live broadcasting of games being played.
Along with the YouTube Gaming website accessible through web browsers, there will be an application for mobile devices.
Leading video game play broadcasting platform Twitch was at E3 in force, streaming press conferences, demos, interviews and more.
US online retail giant Amazon last year bolstered its Internet video presence, whistling past Google to snatch up Twitch and its huge audience for live-streamed gaming.
The acquisition was one of the largest in Amazon's history: $970 million in cash for the three-year-old Internet company.
Twitch Interactive streams games being played for non-playing viewers to watch, and hosts gaming events.
It allows viewers to chat with the players and others, lending it some of the qualities of social networking websites, and it sells advertising to generate income.
Google had reportedly been working out a billion-dollar deal last year to buy Twitch, but backed off due to anti-trust concerns and cleared the way for Amazon to swoop in.
- E-sports boom -
The take-over came with a boom in online viewing of real-time video game or computer game play as "e-sports" attract growing crowds as spectator events.
Console makers Sony and Microsoft have built Twitch game streaming capabilities into PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, respectively.
"We put a big bet on streaming of game play being a strong part of the console universe," Sony Computer Entertainment chief Andrew House told AFP.
"I think we made the right bet, putting a share button on the controller was a big statement."
Twitch bills itself as the world's largest video game broadcasting network.
Millions of people monthly watch video game play streamed using Twitch, which boasts partners such as the Electronic Sports League, Major League Gaming and IGN Pro League.
San Francisco-based Twitch was created by the founders of live video streaming platform Justin.tv -- Justin Kan and Emmett Shear.
"People want to immediately make it Google versus Amazon, YouTube versus Twitch, but it is really about empowering people to broadcast and share," Wyatt said.
"We owe it to our viewers to have a live product; it is natural to say we are taking on their core business."
Live broadcasting of videogame play has been at the heart of a booming "e-sports" trend. Wyatt saw similar attractions at work when it came to winning fans for e-sports and traditional sports.
"There is something clearly awesome about watching competition in general," Wyatt said.
"It almost feels like e-sports was inevitable."
He predicted that e-sports would become a billion-dollar industry by the year 2018.
"It goes with the passion for gaming," said Yves Guillemot, chief executive of French video game titan Ubisoft. "E-sports will grow fast."
Source: AFP
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