This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: they changed their name and expanded their focus, so this needs a rewrite. (July 2014) |
The Open Gaming Alliance is a non-profit organization of hardware manufacturers, game developers, game publishers and others, with the goal of promoting and advancing the PC as a gaming platform.[1]
The PC Gaming Alliance was announced during the Game Developers Conference 2008.[2]
In 2014, the PC Gaming Alliance changed its name to the Open Gaming Alliance[3] and now focuses on all mainstream non-console gaming platforms, including Windows, OS X, SteamOS, Linux, desktops, laptops, and tablets.
Goals and activities
editThe OGA is among other things working to develop marketing for PC games, combat piracy, developing new business models beyond retail sales, and establish minimum hardware requirements for computer games, along with guidelines for developers to make games work for those requirements. According to former president Randy Stude, the PC Gaming Alliance is to "help make certain that the PC game industry had a public voice and a pulpit for accurately communicating the size, growth and overall popularity of the single largest gaming platform worldwide." They also perform market research for their members and the public.[4]
Members
edit- Dell
- Arxan Technologies
- Cloud Imperium Games
- Corsair Components Inc
- Digital River
- DinoPC
- EMA
- Intel Corp.
- Lenovo
- Nexosis
- Razer USA Ltd.
- Ubisoft
- Unity
- Webroot
Former members
editSee also
edit- Games for Windows
- GamePC Consortium—a similar organization formed in the mid-1990s
- Multimedia PC, an early effort by the SPA to define levels of PC hardware capabilities
References
edit- ^ Worldwide gaming experience
- ^ GDC '08: PC Gaming Alliance founded
- ^ "PC Gaming Alliance becomes the Open Gaming Alliance, welcomes tablets into its loving embrace". PC Gamer. 25 July 2014.
- ^ "Big Download Interview: PC Gaming Alliance President Randy Stude". Archived from the original on 2008-11-04. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
External links
edit