Apple may let players access xCloud on iOS through web app

iOS

Apple had changed its rules for App Store to prohibit game streaming apps but it will attempt to get around the rules by letting players access xCloud through a web app

Apple redefined its App Store rules to explicitly prohibit game streaming apps, which prevented Microsoft from getting its xCloud Xbox streaming tech on iPhones and iPads – but according to a new report, the company will attempt to circumvent the rules by letting players access xCloud through a web app.

Microsoft had added xCloud to its Game Pass subscription service, and in a recent meeting, EVP and gaming lead Phil Spencer confidently told employees that Game Pass would be coming to iPhones and iPads via a ‘direct browser-based solution,’ sources told Business Insider. Microsoft is reportedly aiming to launch its iOS version in 2021.

Apple’s redefined App Store terms weren’t specifically phrased to keep out competition; specifically, the company opposes game streaming services for offering catalogues of games that Apple can’t approve title by title. It’s unclear whether Microsoft’s web app solution would adhere to Apple’s rules.

Running a streaming service through a web app is exactly how the newly-announced Amazon Luna is planning to operate. Amazon is confident enough in this workaround that it plans to launch on iPhones and iPads first when it launches its beta in the coming months, with Android support to follow.

But crucially, Amazon worked with Apple’s Safari team to get Luna running as an above-board web app, Luna’s head of engineering told Engadget in a rundown of the upcoming service. And the partnership likely won’t stop when the service goes live, Luna head Marc Whitten told the publication: We’ll continue working with Apple,” Whitten told Engadget. “We’d love to do a native experience.

It’s unclear whether Microsoft is investigating a similar arrangement with Apple to develop its xCloud Game Pass web app.

Notably, Amazon and Apple renewed ties earlier this year when the latter allowed the Prime Video apps on iOS, iPadOS and tvOS to enable in-app purchases. Amazon had previously used the popular yet clumsy workaround of directing customers out of the app to buy on a browser in order to evade Apple’s 30% cut, but seemed to have worked out a deal to get shoppers buying through the app.

The deal likely slashed the percentage Amazon gave to Apple: Apple allegedly convinced Amazon in 2016 to bring Prime Video to iOS devices by agreeing to slash its cut to 15%, according to a Bloomberg report in June.

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