News

6/recent/ticker-posts

El nuevo BMW Serie 5 puede jugar los juegos de iPad de sus hijos, pero peor

Los juegos en el automóvil son una de esas cosas que los fabricantes quieren creer que realmente despegarán, a pesar de que no hemos visto mucha evidencia que lo respalde. Los juegos móviles y "casuales" parecen una buena opción, pero la gente ya tiene acceso a ellos en sus dispositivos. Luego está Tesla, que pone la potencia de una PC para juegos en sus autos para todas esas veces que quieres pasar dos horas en un estacionamiento jugando The Witcher III. Nada de eso suena muy atractivo, pero qué demonios: BMW quiere participar, y la Serie 5 de 2024 podrá admitir un punto de juego ligero en asociación con un servicio llamado AirConsole.


AirConsole es básicamente una aplicación que alberga un montón de juegos, muchos de ellos títulos independientes y multijugador, a los que puedes acceder con una suscripción. Eso lo hace como Apple Arcade, excepto que, a diferencia de Apple Arcade, AirConsole le permite proyectar el juego en una pantalla dedicada mientras los jugadores usan sus propios dispositivos como controladores. La idea con la nueva Serie 5 es que los jugadores vean el juego en la pantalla de infoentretenimiento de su automóvil, pero usen un teléfono o tableta, emparejados a través de un código QR, para controlar su experiencia.

f you’re a parent stuck in the car with your kids — and the car isn’t moving, to be clear — you’ll be able to pass the time with a range of “so-called casual games,” as BMW mentions in its press release. One of those happens to be Overcooked, a co-op staple:

With AirConsole, players can play so-called casual games. These are games that are easy to pick up and play and intuitive to control. The selection available for the market introduction of the new BMW 5 Series saloon includes racing, sports, quiz and music quiz games as well as simulation, strategy, jump-and-run and puzzle games. The 15 or so titles available to play from the start include “Go Kart Go”, “Golazo”, “Music Guess” and “Overcooked”. The portfolio of available games will be continually expanded.

A passenger selects a video game on the 2024 BMW 5 Series display through AirConsole.

BMW Blog tried a demo of the feature themselves, and found the performance satisfactory. Games are small enough to be downloaded from the cloud, then stored and run on local hardware inside the car.

The thing is, the 5 Series’ display isn’t that much larger than an iPad’s. And since chances are you or your child already has games on their tablet, what exactly is the benefit here? AirConsole offers limited, ad-supported access to some titles for free, but requires a $24 yearly subscription or $8 per month to explore its full library with the maximum number of players. One reviewer on the Google Play Store gave the service three stars, with a ringing endorsement to end all others: “The only thing is, there aren’t many good games.”

Jalopnik reached out to BMW to inquire about pricing, and more specifically if the automaker will issue a separate charge on top of AirConsole’s own. While the company isn’t offering full details yet, a representative did say AirConsole is “included in the 5 Series ConnectedDrive Professional for one year, and after that can be activated flexibly for a charge.” This seems like one of these take-or-leave luxuries on a road trip, but they’re not a heavy lift for BMW’s in-car hardware, and someone might subscribe to them. So, here they are.

Post a Comment

0 Comments