Font Size
15px

Chapter 220: Chapter 156: Nobug

"Face the wind!"

"Sorry, I K failed..."

With the crisp sound of the chanical keyboard, the character controlled by Chen Ba died once again, leaving behind a glorious score of 1-16-7.

"Trash ga!"

After cursing, Chen Ba closed the settlent page and turned to scold Lu: "You’re playing as a top lane Golem, can’t you be more useful? We agreed on mid-top coordination, but I haven’t received any of your ultimates!"

"It’s been a while since I played..."

Lu scratched the back of his head, feeling a bit awkward: "Getting back into it, I can’t even farm properly, and my skills are all over the place."

"Don’t just say I’m the one dragging down the team; Ba, your Yasuo play feels even worse than mine!"

"I haven’t played for a while myself."

Thinking about how he got solo killed multiple tis in lane and died wandering around during team fights, Chen Ba was also a bit lacking in confidence.

After all, it’s been too long since he played.

League of Legends has beco a mory from youth, picking it up again was just to see what the ga looks like now.

As a ga producer, it’s essential to maintain a love for gas.

Additionally, one must keep up with changes and trends in the gaming industry, try out new gas, and not build in isolation.

It’s like online authors who browse rankings before starting a new book to choose a topic according to the current market trends; ga producers should also often play gas.

If you don’t play yourself, how can you know what players’ tastes are?

Chen Ba still rembers.

In the Tianba core fan group, there’s an employee from Pig Factory who always beckons others to co play League, playing all kinds of gas as the original farr League faction.

Whenever a new ga cos out, among the first players entering will surely be employees from rival companies and independent ga developers.

Don’t ask, if you ask it’s because everyone’s trying to make a living; others play gas purely for entertainnt, but for them, it’s both relaxation and part of their job.

Chen Ba and Lu are the sa.

To better understand the current ga market, Chen Ba called Lu and Zhong Shengwei to play so mainstream gas with the attitude of work.

Both online and offline gas...

Let’s not talk about single-player gas, mainly the online ones; after they played around, they found there haven’t really been outstanding new gas in recent years.

League of Legends still has many players, and even CrossFire and PUBG, which are often said to be dying, remain mainstream gas.

"It’s been a long ti since there was a blockbuster PC ga."

Upon learning of Ba’s doubt, Yang Dong sighed and said: "The last phenonon-level PC ga was Pig Factory’s Eternal Damnation, you know the specific reasons."

This is an obvious fact.

Compared to computers, mobile phones, tablets, and other mobile devices are just too ubiquitous and convenient.

This has led to mobile gas being the hottest direction in the dostic gaming market, with the number of mobile gas released in a month surpassing all new PC gas in a year.

The ratio is quite alarming.

Of course!

The dostic single-player ga sector has never really flourished, so even with the rise of mobile gas, single-player gas remain as they were.

In fact, single-player ga players have increased!

It’s not just talk; according to statistics released by the Steam platform, the number of players and active users in the national region are still maintaining at a very high level.

"It has sothing to do with us, right?"

"Star Emperor, Divine Grace Continent, Love Advisor Departnt, and Speeding Frenzy have also cultivated a batch of dedicated single-player ga players."

Yang Dong uses PUBG as an example.

Back when PUBG was popular, it also attracted many players who usually don’t play single-player gas.

Initially, many people took the Steam platform as a PUBG launcher, but as they browsed around, one day they impulsively bought a ga and from then on beca a single-player ga player.

Many are like this.

During this process, Tianba Studio played a role in attracting traffic, with several of its popular gas also cultivating a large number of new single-player fans.

"It’s really frustrating always giving Steam platform traffic!"

Chen Ba furrowed his brow and said: "Completely breaking away from Steam platform isn’t realistic, after all, it has many single-player ga users. But our proprietary platform should be built by now."

As of now, the gas under Tianba Studio have two purchasing channels.

One is third-party platforms like Steam, console platforms, E-Shop, and WeGa, etc.

The other consists of self-owned channels like Tianba Official Website and Tianba Community APP.

Chen Ba plans to integrate them.

Basing on the purchase and download pages of Tianba Community APP and Tianba Official Website, he aims to build an integrated Tianba Ga platform.

This platform will be similar to Origin, and through bundling ga accounts, it’s about locking in a group of player users.

No matter where you purchase and download the ga, whether Steam or WeGa, you’ll have to log into the Tianba Ga platform to enter the ga.

"What’s the na of this platform?"

Yang Dong asked curiously: "Is it just Tianba? Isn’t that too uncreative? Others specifically na theirs, shouldn’t we do the sa?"

"It should have a na!"

Lu agreed: "Steam, Origin, Xbox, and Epic... most have exclusive nas rather than company nas."

It’s sort of a convention.

There’s no rule saying that a ga platform can’t use the company na; if Chen Ba wants to use the company na, he can directly call it Tianba Ga.

But still, it’s rare for the industry to do it like that.

Generally, ga platforms tend to have independent nas. For example, Penguin’s platform isn’t called Penguin Ga but WeGa, EA’s is called Origin, Valve’s is Steam...

You are reading This Is Not a Bug bu Chapter 220 - 156: Nobug on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Tip: use the left and right arrow keys to move between chapters.
开启瀑布流阅读
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.