• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Xbox lead Phil Spencer says the industry will start to see the impacts of coronavirus in early 2021, as some crucial aspects of video game production

IbizaPocholo

NeoGAFs Kent Brockman

By March 2021, the industry could start to see the broader effects of the coronavirus. Games planned to launch next year and beyond are most likely to face issues with development that could lead to delays or cancellations.

"Through the summer, early fall? I feel pretty good about those games," Microsoft's Xbox leader Phil Spencer told Business Insider. "Games that were targeting a year from now or beyond? There'll be some impact, but they'll be able to react."

Many of those titles have yet to be revealed, but all blockbuster games take years to make, with hundreds or thousands of people working in offices around the world — something that's become nearly impossible during a global pandemic. Studios outright can't remotely do the motion capture ("mocap") or audio work needed to put the finishing touches on a game.

"Mocap is just something that's basically stopped. We're not going into mocap studios," Spencer told Business Insider. "If you had all your animation captured and you're doing touch up in more individual art production and in areas like textures and other things, you're in a better position. If you're waiting for a lot of either large audio work — when it's with symphonies and other things — or mocap, you're held up right now and you're making progress in areas that you are."

Annual sports franchises like "Madden" and "FIFA" are a good place to start. "It's really in those [types of] games that were trying to finally get all their asset base together in terms of art production that they might have the biggest impact," Spencer said.

One thing that appears to still be on track: Microsoft's next-generation game console, the Xbox Series X, which is scheduled to arrive this holiday season. Spencer is overseeing the launch of the Xbox Series X — his first new Xbox console launch as the head of the Xbox team at Microsoft.

"Even though we're obviously not traveling to China, we feel good about our progress on hardware," Spencer said. "I've got my take-home [console] downstairs and I'm playing on it most nights, and I feel good about the software updates that we're doing."

That doesn't mean launch will be totally unaffected. "From the kind of pomp and circumstance around launches, you might find a time where there's some impact," he said, "some things that were going to launch, and maybe they moved a little bit." Regardless, Spencer remains confident not only in the upcoming Xbox console launch, but in the larger game industry as it struggles to deal with the fallout of a global pandemic.

"I'm pretty confident in the industry's ability to continue a steady flow of games coming out," he said. "There's just a lot of games in production across the industry right now, and I think we're going to be — as an industry — we're going to be fine. I'm bullish on what this means in the long run for games, even if there's a certain impact to a certain launch window for certain titles that we might see."
 

quest

Not Banned from OT
Duh people are less productive at home especially collaborating on large projects. I still go in the office most days even with real threat of covid health care setting. Because easier to get stuff done at my desk not distracted at home. Worst meeting with people distracted or dogs barking ect.
 
Duh people are less productive at home especially collaborating on large projects. I still go in the office most days even with real threat of covid health care setting. Because easier to get stuff done at my desk not distracted at home. Worst meeting with people distracted or dogs barking ect.

How do you go about doing motion capture or having an Orchestra conduct music from home? No doubt there are parts of game production, that can't be handled at home
 
Last edited:

Tranquil

Member
Duh people are less productive at home especially collaborating on large projects. I still go in the office most days even with real threat of covid health care setting. Because easier to get stuff done at my desk not distracted at home. Worst meeting with people distracted or dogs barking ect.
You must not have read the article.
 

DunDunDunpachi

Patient MembeR
This only applies to larger teams.

Indie devs are gonna enjoy even less market competition from the big names. I expect at least one or two more Minecraft-tier games to be out by 2021, unassuming little indie projects that explode in popularity.
 
Top Bottom