Gaikai streams Bulletstorm console game in the Chrome browser

Game startup Gaikai streamed the high-end game Bulletstorm to the Chrome web browser today in a demo at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco.

Normally, you have to play such games using a console and game disc. Or you could play it by using a streaming service such as Gaikai or OnLive. But today’s demo was interesting because it showed how high-end games can run in an ordinary Chrome web browser. There is no need for Flash or Java in this demo, and it uses a gamepad and full playing screen.

As we noted in our Lara Croft on Chrome story, the open source Native Client technology has effectively turned Chrome into a new game platform with hundreds of millions of users. Chrome allows games to make use of computers’ 3D graphics hardware. That makes it possible to run games with high-end console-like graphics in a web browser. The benefits of running a game natively in Chrome is high performance, security, and the ability to port to the system easily. It is easy to port existing PC and console games to the Chrome native client partly because developers can use a variety of familiar programming tools. The Unity 3D game engine includes a check box that a developer can click in order to make a Unity-based game run on the Chrome browser.

The game was executed in the Native Client sandbox. Here’s the demo below.


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