Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Could Google Stadia “go far beyond video games?” The dev behind Kine thinks so

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google Stadia’s launch is right around the corner, set for November 19, but things already appear a bit underwhelming. That’s on account of the slow arrival of hardware for customers who pre-ordered and the meager Stadia launch lineup of games.

Gwen Frey, developer of Kine, admits she’s not aware of plans by Google for the future of the service, but she believes it has more potential than just streaming games to compete with Xbox and PlayStation. Digital Trends asked how she thinks, and hopes, Stadia will evolve.

Recommended Videos

“In the immediate, Stadia is targeting gaming and the potential in that market,” she said, “but I do think that software streaming has potential benefits that go far beyond video games. If you boil down what a service like Stadia is to its core then it is this: There is software that is running on a server in the cloud.”

Frey sees this opening the door for more seamless computing between devices, and on the go. Just as you can switch from playing Stadia on a computer to a phone in an instant, you could theoretically do this with any computing tasks.

“What if instead of having applications in windows, all of my software was running in tabs on Chrome. What if I could seamlessly click a button and have those same tabs from my work PC on my phone while I’m in transit, and then click a button again, and have those same tabs in Chrome open on my home PC?” Frey speculated.

If Google is intentionally rolling Stadia out slow, it could be to feel out what potential Stadia has to offer beyond gaming. We’ve already seen how Google Stadia plans to offer new ways to encourage community engagement by letting players jump straight into games that are being streamed live, and enabled shared saves that let players all start from the same point.

A rough start anticipated

At the start, Stadia will only have 12 titles available. Frey’s musical puzzle game, Kine, is one of them. Recent Tomb Raider games comprise three of the other games available. Another 14 are expected before the end of the year.

This launch may seem weak to gamers and industry critics. With the expense of a Founder’s Edition pushing toward the price of a new game console, it doesn’t stand up as a strong offering against the Xbox One and PS4.

On that point, Frey expressed concerns in an interview with Gameindustry.biz. “I’m not sure it will have a super-strong launch initially,” Frey said, “but I don’t even think they want to have a super-strong launch.”

Frey believes that Google may intentionally be rolling the service out slowly. That would be to let Google scale the service more gradually, which would be in contrast to the sudden, massive influxes of users seen by huge online games like Destiny or Call of Duty.

For some, that slow launch can lead to concern that Google may pull the plug on this project as it has on many others. “The biggest complaint most developers have with Stadia is the fear is Google is just going to cancel it,” Frey said. She acknowledges there’s plenty of failure in tech, and even Google has “canceled a lot of projects.”

Mark Knapp
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Sony wants AI to turn your gaming moments into shareable highlights
Sony's new patent could make sharing your gaming highlights as easy as playing the game.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

If you have ever gone on an absolute rampage in a multiplayer game and wanted to share it, you know how painful the process is. You record, scrub through footage, clip the moment, edit it, and then finally share it. Sony wants to change all of that, and AI is at the center of it.

As discovered by MP1st, Sony Interactive Entertainment filed a patent application with the USPTO on May 5, 2026, under document ID "12616902," for an AI system that automatically selects your best gaming moments and turns them into shareable highlights, without you lifting a finger.

Read more
I hate scalpers, and Valve’s Steam Machine queue is exactly what we need
Valve may have found the right way to sell the Steam Machine
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

I hate scalpers. I especially hate scalpers when they swarm gaming hardware that already has limited availability. They buy it before regular customers and gamers can get a fair shot, and then relist it at cartoonish prices for the people who actually wanted to use it. We've seen this issue time and time again, but Valve's latest move might be the best anti-scalper weapon I've seen in a while.

Steam’s database now suggests Valve may already have a reservation queue system prepared for the upcoming Steam Machine. The discovery reportedly comes from a recent Steam update spotted by user Pepeizq, in which references to multiple Steam Machine packages appeared within the same reservation system code used for the Steam Controller.

Read more
Wordle is getting a TV show on NBC, and it already feels like a betrayal
Wordle is becoming an NBC primetime game show in 2027.
Woman playing Wordle on her smartphone.

Every morning, millions of people open Wordle, stare at a blank grid, and spend a few quiet minutes locked in a private battle with the five letters.

There is no host narrating your every move, no studio audience gasping when you waste a guess on a word, and absolutely nobody cheering you on. Just you, the word, and the slightly smug satisfaction of getting it right under three attempts.

Read more