Currently, various Sega games are available across multiple streaming services.
The amount these services individually charge vary depending on the features and games made available. For example, Xbox Game Pass prices range from £6.99 to £14.99 a month, while PlayStation Plus ranges from £6.99 to £13.49 a month.
So it would make financial sense for Sega for people who are playing its titles to pay it subscription fees rather its rivals.
It could also be attractive for people who mostly want to play Sega games – but for everyone else it could result in higher costs.
Rachel Howie streams herself playing games on Twitch, where she is known as DontRachQuit to her fans, and said she was “excited and worried” about another subscription service
“We have so many subscriptions already that we find it very difficult to justify signing up for a new one,” she told the BBC.
“I think that SEGA will definitely have a core dedicated audience that will benefit from this, but will the average gamer choose this over something like Game Pass?”
And Sophie Smart, Production Director at UK developer No More Robots, agreed.
“As someone whose first console was the Sega Mega Drive, what I’d love more than anything is to see Sega thriving and this feels like a step in a modern direction,” she said.
But she wondered if Sega did create a rival subscription service if this would lead to their games being removed from other services.
“If so, it could mean that consumers are shelling out more money across owning multiple subscription services,” she said.
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