Google hasn't announced Stadia in a vacuum; game streaming services have been in the works for years, with varying degrees of success. The technology to provide virtually lag-free, high-end graphics over miles of cables and Wi-Fi networks has only recently become robust enough. Thus, it comes as no surprise that Microsoft on Tuesday announced the public preview of its own remote gaming service xCloud, available starting next month.

The service has been in the works at Microsoft for some time – the company gave attendees of GDC and Gamescom an early preview of what it was working on and announced it a year ago already. With the release of the public preview, Microsoft wants to test how it scales up and see which issues arise when people who are not employees game outside of controlled networks.

Just as Xbox launched with Halo, so will xCloud. The first games available to the platform are Halo 5: Guardians, Gears 5, Killer Instinct, and Sea of Thieves. More games are planned to join these as Microsoft is working on improving the gaming service.

To partake in the preview, you'll need a phone or tablet running Android 6 Marshmallow or higher with Bluetooth 4.0, a Microsoft account, and an Xbox One controller. You should at least have 10Mbit/s downstream, and the company recommends a 5GHz connection should you use the service on Wi-Fi. Access to games is provided via a new Game Streaming app. To improve and optimize xCloud, Microsoft also announced technical partnerships with T-Mobile in the US, Vodafone in the UK, and SK Telecom in South Korea. You'll still need an unlimited data plan to reasonably play, though.

The public preview is coming this October and will be available in the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Korea. To sign up, head to Microsoft's xCloud website, click "Register now" towards the bottom of the page, fill out a form, and then you can hope that you'll receive an invite. So far, the company says the service is free to test and hasn't announced pricing. Microsoft even says that it "will be a multi-year journey to deliver this technology," so you can expect the company to open up the preview to more people and countries before releasing a stable version.

Microsoft's approach of a multi-year test deployment is much more careful than Google's push for disruption, and it'll be interesting to see how the competition plays out in the long run. The Redmond company's comfortable position in the gaming industry allows it to move more thoughtfully, and the service might just end up feeling more complete than Google's at launch.

Source: Microsoft, T-Mobile

UPDATE: 2019/10/01 11:31am PDT BY MATTHEW SHOLTZ

The Xbox Game Streaming preview is live on the Play Store

As promised, the Xbox Game Streaming preview has made its way to the Play Store during the month of October. You can use this app for both streaming Xbox games from your console to your Android devices and xCloud streaming right from Microsoft's servers. Initially, these services will only be available to Xbox Insiders in limited markets. Availability should expand in the future, and so far only a few games are included in both. It's worth noting that in order to play you'll need an Xbox Wireless Controller with Bluetooth functionality. The Console Streaming preview also requires that your Xbox is turned on or in the Instant-on mode, and as expected, in order to play online-multiplayer titles you'll need an Xbox Live Gold membership. So if you happen to be an Xbox Insider and would like to check out the Xbox Game Streaming preview, now's your chance.

UPDATE: 2020/01/23 6:03am PST BY MANUEL VONAU

Beta comes to Canada on January 29

The Xbox Game Streaming Project xCloud preview is headed to Canada following the October 2019 launch in the US, the UK, and Korea. While the platform will only go live on January 29, you can already register for the beta on Microsoft's site right now. You'll get access to the same library of more than 50 games that's been available to testers in other locations, including Halo, Destiny 2, Tekken 7, Devil May Cry 5, and Civilization VI. The Xbox Game Streaming app will be available in French and English.

UPDATE: 2020/04/07 4:50am PDT BY RITA EL KHOURY

Preview registration open in 11 European countries

Microsoft has detailed its plans to launch the xCloud game streaming service in Europe. The company wants to take a "measured approach" given the struggles with internet connectivity and bandwidth in many European countries right now, and is only opening up preview sign-ups in 11 markets, listed below. Users can signal their interest here, and Microsoft says it'll starts tests when it sees fit in every country, with a limited number of users, then ramp it up cautiously.

  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Ireland
  • Italy
  • Netherlands
  • Norway
  • Spain
  • Sweden