Amazon could be a huge threat to the gaming industry

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Amazon (AMZN) is officially a gaming company, and that should worry industry mainstays like Nintendo (NTDOY), Microsoft (MSFT), and Sony (SNE), as well as newcomers like Google (GOOG, GOOGL).

Amazon has been providing gaming content via its online store and its mega-popular Twitch streaming platform, but on Wednesday, the company launched its first big-budget title, a free-to-play game called “Crucible.”

Amazon will follow that up with another game later this summer called “New World,” and all of that is seemingly leading to the tech titan’s launch of a cloud gaming service called Project Tempo.

If successful, Amazon, which seeks to dominate every industry it enters with ruthless efficiency, could become a new gaming heavyweight, and that would spell trouble for gaming’s old guard.

The Crucible test

Amazon has been a major part of the gaming industry since it purchased Twitch, the online game streaming service, in 2014 for nearly $1 billion in cash. Twitch is the go-to platform for gamers who want to watch their favorite streamers play everything from old-school games to the latest blockbuster titles.

It made household names out of the likes of the streamer Ninja, who famously played “Fortnite” with rapper Drake, drawing more than 600,000 concurrent viewers, crushing the previous record of 388,000 viewers. It’s also become a major marketing tool for game publishers who seed Twitch streamers with their latest titles, which, in turn, puts those games in front of millions of potential customers.

And that’s beyond the fact that Amazon is already a go-to destination for purchasing games and consoles, or that the company also has a Twitch Prime service that gives subscribers access to access to special in-game loot, as well as free titles every month.

But it’s “Crucible” that will prove to be Amazon’s most important test. The game, which is a hybrid of some of the most recognizable online games available, including Riot’s incredibly popular “League of Legends” and Activision Blizzard’s (ATVI) “Overwatch,” is the first AAA title from Amazon Games’ Seattle-based Relentless Studios.

The company has two additional production houses: Amazon Games San Diego and Amazon Games Orange County.

'Crucible' is Amazon's first big-bugdget game title, and could herald even a massive change in the industry. (Image: Amazon)
'Crucible' is Amazon's first big-bugdget game title, and could herald even a massive change in the industry. (Image: Amazon)

Amazon is taking the free-to-play route with “Crucible,” with the company hoping to make its money via in-game transactions similar to “Fortnite” or “Call of Duty: Warzone.” It’s a proven formula, as “Fortnite” alone has pulled in billions of dollars for Epic Games.

For “Crucible” to succeed though, it needs to be able to appeal to a large swath of gamers, and reach a critical mass that sends its popularity skyrocketing. The game is already being streamed on Twitch, but isn’t among the most-watched titles despite launching on Tuesday.