When it comes to sovereignty calculations, it either goes south due to lack of resources, or it goes down the path of China’s copycat and is no longer sovereign.
back Putin orders the government In order to develop Russian game consoles in the spring, Russian industry has Choose to go both ways. The first is to design a sovereign console based on a dual-core domestic Elbrus processor. Habr.com reports;The other is to build a cloud gaming service based on cheap consumer-grade hardware and call it “sovereign” because it starts from erythrocyte Report.
Russia is developing a gaming console based on the Elbrus processor, which uses a very long instruction word (VLIW) microarchitecture and is initially targeted at heavy-duty, mission-critical workloads. Performance-wise, Mount Elbrus is nothing to write home about benchmark Basically found “totally unacceptable“For most tasks.
“This is obvious to everyone: Elbrus processors [cannot] “Equal competition”
Anton Gorelkin, National Information Policy Council
The new console isn’t expected to perform as well as the old one Playstation 5 or Xbox Series X|Sso Russian politicians want developers to create something unconventional to overcome performance challenges.
“I hope that my colleagues will approach this task with full responsibility and come up with some truly groundbreaking results,” Anton Gorkin, deputy chairman of the State Duma Committee on Information Policy, wrote. “Everyone is It’s clear: Elbrus processors are not yet at the level needed to compete on an equal footing with the PS5 and Xbox, which means the solution has to be unconventional.”
This unconventional approach may involve simplifying the game to the point where the Elbrus CPU can handle it (Russian audiences can still play world-class games and may not play those “simplified” games) or use cloud rendering and computing, which means Gamers need perfect broadband with low latency to enjoy their games.
Interestingly, Gorelkin emphasized that consoles should not only be used as a platform for porting old games, but also as a platform for popularizing domestic video games.
Speaking of cloud gaming, Russian gamers may be interested in game consoles developed by MTS, a well-known Russian telecommunications company. MTS has made no secret that its console is a cloud-based gaming service, although the company calls it MTS mist play platform.
The device uses low-end hardware, comes with an Xbox-like controller, and costs about $50. Since for $50 you can’t build a console capable of rendering entry-level Android games, the device will rely on MTS’s Fog Play cloud service. The service will support remote gaming and rental gaming principles (ie, owners of high-end PCs interested in MTS games can rent the games and still rely on the hardware they own).
Neither console is available yet, but we’ll be keeping an eye out for benchmarks when they do.