January 9, 2008

WeGame Launches As YouTube For Gamers

Mark Hendrickson

58 comments »

When I was younger and addicted to PC games like Total Annihilation and Sim City, my parents figured I was flushing priceless hours of my youth down the drain and actively tried to get me to cut back on playing.

Jared Kim, a nineteen-year-old Berkeley dropout, has taken a similar obsession of video games and turned it into something his parents can certainly be proud of: a new website called WeGame that provides both the place and the tools for gamers to share screencasts of their favorite in-game moments. As Kim puts it, the launch of WeGame is like launching YouTube and giving everyone video cameras, because WeGame not only provides a place to upload and share videos, it provides the tools necessary to create the video content itself.

Capturing screencasts of gameplay is currently difficult because recording programs hog system resources, thereby slowing down the games themselves. They also don’t tend to output video files that are compressed well enough for upload. And if you’ve ever tried to convert and resize video clips, you know how much of a pain that is.

WeGame steps in by providing a free desktop client that works tightly with DirectX to capture screencasts from within games without slowing them down significantly. It also outputs those screencasts to AVI files that are small enough for quick uploading to the web, a process that occurs from within the client itself. To record a screencast, just hit a special key while in-game to start and then stop recording. Once you’ve exited the game, you can click the “Upload to WeGame” button, choose a title and description, and the client will convert the AVI file to Flash and publish to the WeGame site directly. Check out a screenshot of the client to the left to see what the interface for this looks like.

The WeGame site itself is much like YouTube, except with a strict focus on game screencasts. You can browse, search, and comment on videos just like you’d expect from a video sharing site. The hope is that gamers will enjoy watching clips of each others’ gaming experiences, and perhaps produce hit clips like Leeroy Jenkins from World of Warcraft. Game studios love this sort of content because it’s free promotion for their products.

WeGame’s desktop client is currently for Windows only, as most games are built on top of Microsoft’s DirectX technology. The client supports the recording of 16 games with more to come over time. Screencasts can be uploaded in two modes: “web” or “HD”, the former being 640 pixels wide and the latter being 1280×1024 in dimension. Both stream at 600kbps as opposed to YouTube’s 300kbps. The company is also working to provide a recorder for casual games that are played through the browser.

Kim and his team of four have been working on WeGame for six months and have raised $500,000 from True Ventures and Naval Ravikant’s HitForge. The company’s advisers include Dennis Fong, Quake world champion and founder of Xfire, and Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress. WeGame is actually Kim’s third company; the first was started in China and focused on creating a matchmaking tool for online gamers. The second was a Dodgeball-like application for college students. He also comes from a tech family of sorts; one of his sisters, Jade Calacanis, is married to Jason Calacanis and another, Joyce Kim, co-hosts the GigaOm show.

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Trackbacks/Pings (Trackback URL)

  1. StartupNewz.com
  2. Mod Revolutions: Next Big Things - Page 7 - Elitist Jerks
  3. Testspiel.de
  4. True Ventures » WeGame Launches - Congrats Jared!
  5. Support this story on Stirrdup
  6. 1000ff
  7. Social Network for Gamers, UGAME, Enters Private Beta
  8. InsaneIdea » Blog Archive » Gamers, Prepare To Raptr
  9. Gamers, Prepare To Raptr : New Web 2.0 Magazine
  10. Impessa blog » Blog Archive » Social Network for Gamers, UGAME, Enters Private Beta

Comments

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  1. sandy

    It will be better that wegame.com supports mobile phone. Or http://www.bywifi.com can transcode its videos into 3gp.

  2. Ivan

    Bad choice.

    We already have gametrailers.com

  3. blah

    Yawn… a totally waste of resource. Just use youtube profile and add games on it. Why do we need all these clones. Come’on, do something original and innovative with that money and talent.

  4. Hiten Shah

    Ivan, I think you misunderstand what WeGame is all about. WeGame lets ANYONE that plays PC Games record their gaming sessions. If you look around on their website you’ll see that they support all of the popular games and they even let you record your SecondLife sessions.

  5. sejongwang

    wow, quality of the videos is awesome. feels like i’m watching the actual game - when will youtube improve their video quality which sucks in comparision? dunno…this may do really well with the gamers who are all about visual quality.

  6. Ivan

    #4

    I understand what they do. Except people already have the bundled service that wegame.com offers. It’s called gametrailers.com and what #3 mentioned youtube.com.

    If you guys want to succeed above these two services you need to provide something unique. BTW the tool to record videos also exists and it’s called FRAPS almost every hardcore gamer has it.

    In case someone is reading for feedback:

    I would suggest you make a partnership with http://www.ventrilo.com or http://www.goteamspeak.com ASAP if you want succeed fast. You have to embed your application in their program so that it offers you 100% flexibility to the gamers out there. Don’t think do it now.

  7. Ivan

    BTW if you want to contact me I could provide you more suggestions. ;)

  8. Sam

    I’ll be honest, I’m no gamer and also no fan of start-ups with no revenue model in place, however, I do see value in this site and an exit to a strategic one day as content and subsequent traffic balloons. The website is well organized and the video graphics are impressive. As for Ivan, I would stop thinking of yourself as some high level consultant and just focus on not spilling that next latte.

  9. HGuide

    I wouldn’t write this service off so quickly. gametrailers.com has gaming videos, and fraps is a separate tool that allows you to capture gaming footage. This site has all of it in one.

    If the quality and ease of use is there, then I think they will grow.

  10. Ivan

    Hey Sam you are honest. You are not a gamer.

    Thanks. All I said are facts and opinions and I hope it helps wegame.com.

  11. ron diggity

    Finally a place to go rather than youtube to watch all the Halo 3 highlights. Nice job!

  12. Joey

    Props to the site and the idea very cool. Only issue i can think of is alot of the avid gaming market is being left out (xbox 360 / ps3 / wii).

  13. Richard

    umm, this reminds me of the niche search engines. the niche social networks and the niche

    the fact is niche social networks actualy work , niche search does not. The reason being that whats delivered in a social network is a common focus and purpose that would be difficult to duplicate in the arena of the market leader (e.g. you would not build a social net for business contacts on myspace).

    As for niche search; while it is purpose driven , it lacks the ability to attract a critical mass, repeatedly. the keyword is repeatably.. if you search findtoys.com you only do it when your looking for toys, then you forget it exists.

    This is more like niche search. However it may do really really well in Asia where gaming is a cultural phenom.

  14. guya

    Finally an original youtube clone. We have enough of these DIY clones.

    This is much more approachable then Fraps.

  15. Mike

    Good to see a fresh new startup and good writeup

    —–
    http://www.xenbet.com

  16. Sev.

    Well, the idea of bundling in-game recording and a broadcasting platform is pretty cool.

    Pretty doubtful hower it’s going to be used that much.

    1- Gamers usually like to add music, cut scenes and do some editing before publishing their movies. Plus, lots of them already use well-known softwares like FRAPS (as someone already said) or GameCam - not that much of a problem if wegame’s software is efficient enough… if not, big issue.

    2- Gamers already have quite well-estalished broadcasting websites, with a MUCH MUCH higher video quality :s
    GameTrailers.com was already mentioned, but new generation platforms such as http://www.gametube.org already now offer HQ quality for free, Full-Flash UI… take a look, quality is like 10 times better. I’m not sure how you’re going to cope with this. you’ll have to increase quality video a lot I guess.

    Good luck anyways! i gess the recording feature is your best chance to do something cool in the gaming world! ;-)

  17. Michael Arrington

    sev - the music comment is a good one. One thing wegame does (soon) is allow users to open up their microphone while the game is playing so they can talk during the clip (it’s what makes the leroy jenkins video so funny). They could of course be playing music in the background, too. Not very clean, but it works.

  18. Sev.

    That will do for short “one-off” movie clips yes. Not for machinima or fragmovies however ;-)

  19. Tyler

    The video quality is amazing. That aspect alone gives this site a chance to succeed I would think. Youtube is great, but much of the videos are of such low quality. If I want to watch a video of a video game, picture quality is possibly the most important trait I’m looking for.

  20. Sev.

    Tyler, wegame & youtube quality is exactly the same : about 500 kb/s video
    (just did the test capturing one of wegame’s video)

    And let’s face it, it’s way behind other gaming websites (www.gametube.org, http://www.gametrailers.com)…

    I agree video quality is important and I think they should improve it!

  21. Jared

    Thanks everyone for your feedback. Since our service is still in its infancy, we would love to hear suggestions from the community.

    A few quick facts to answer some questions:

    - The videos you record through our client are saved to your computer. You are free to upload the original video file to wherever you please, but we do hope you try WeGame.com out :)

    - The outputted video files on your computer are not watermarked. The only time you would see a WeGame watermark would be if you uploaded it to WeGame.com and used our embeddable player.

    to Sev: We are in the process of finding the perfect balance between quality and size in our videos, so you can expect constant tweaking on our end. Everybody loves high-quality videos, but we want to ensure videos are served up quickly to our users without much waiting. Nonetheless, we want to deliver the best looking gaming videos that we can :)

  22. kk

    uhm. Like Fraps?

  23. Allen Stern

    where’s my screencast of my ms.pac man championship from the 80s in atlantic city?

  24. Dannielle

    My kids are gaming addicts so I’m sure they’ll be interested in this although my husband and I do try to limit their time spent gaming.

  25. Asad

    That kids getting a whole lotta free consulting.

  26. Albert Lai

    Saying WeGame is like “FRAPS” (capturing your own video and manually recoding it and uploading it to YouTube) is like saying a self hosted FTP site is a competitor to YouTube. Its about focusing on connivence, ease of use, and simplicity of the solution.

    Having an application+web service that is entirely focused on easily capturing game videos and sharing it with your friends and the world is totally different than FRAPs or GameTrailers — which is primarily focused on videos produced by game developers and publishers to promote/show in game videos (vs. user generated movies).

    As someone who has built and sold a media sharing site (bubbleshare.com), and a gamer for many years (25+ years), I can understand the appeal and the massive potential of this (focusing on simplifying the process in which users can share and view their gaming experiences — i.e. the Polaroid instant camera for gamers). I’m not saying that just because I happen to know Jared and think he’s a killer savvy guy. But because games are becoming much more social, open ended, and interesting for spectators (not so much for NBC, but for the massive audience of gamers that are interested in interesting/silly/fun ways of screwing around with game engines, hacks, and alternative solutions to various games) — which lend themselves to becoming much more creative .

  27. HGuide

    Thanks Albert,

    It’s obvious that the TC audience is not too hip on games, perhaps this startup chose the wrong venue for their PR.

  28. Allen Vartazarian

    Aren’t those the same profile pics that digg uses for people that havent uploaded one?

    http://www.wegame.com/static/images/noavatar-m.jpg

  29. Sev.

    btw, wegames does belong to Curse-gaming, right?

  30. sawyer

    The site looks pretty,but I can only access the home page of wegame.com, any other pages can’t be accessed. Is there anyone face the same problem?

  31. mash

    Jared seems like an awesome developer and entrepeneur. But sure wish calacanis were my uncle!

  32. mash

    i have 2 sisters! any takers!

  33. Karl

    Why are all these sites copying off youtube, gametrailers, ect. You can do all of these things on gametrailers.com and youtube. Too many people are creating sites and expecting it to blow up like youtube did.

  34. Don

    I’ve spent a few hours today exploring WeGame and I like what I have seen so far. The site has a great layout, it’s well organized and easy to use.

    Some might see it as a YouTube clone, but I think that the focus on a more specific topic is a great feature. I think that niche video sites like this could really take off. YouTube is great but 95% of the videos there don’t interest me in the least. With a focused site like WeGame or ShredOrDie, I am much more likely to find something that I want to watch.

    I’m also more likely to find people that are interested in watching my videos. I uploaded a couple of my clips this afternoon. In just a few hours these videos have already been seen as many times as the ones on YouTube. The YouTube versions have been online for weeks or months.

  35. dave

    http://www.fragbucket.com has been online for over a year, weGame is nothing new.

  36. Sam Mathews

    Working on a gaming niche start up myself, I see a huge potential for what Jared is doing. Merging fraps with a gaming youtube also a great concept. We have untill now only been focusing on the gaming youtube idea, and we see it as having huge potential. What people dont realise is that there are over 260 million online gamers, many of whom are medium to hardcore around 80+ million, thats a huge target market for Jared and wegame, especially as frag movies are extremely popular as well as WoW boss kills, or even 6 year old guitar hero players etc :D

    I like your site a lot Jared, I think however you are going to need great marketing and a strong gaming social network to make this work. Thats why i would actually like to meet :D

    Feel free to contact me if your interested in discussing what Im doing.

  37. Sam Mathews

    P.s. My email is sam [at] ugame.net

  38. Nunya

    @#35 Dave,
    I’m sorry, where on fragbucket is the software to record games?
    Oh there is none? Oh yea, I guess this is something new isn’t it?

  39. Don

    This site will flop if it relies on user-created content. It’s just that simple.

    Gamers like myself may enjoy some of the user-made content on sites such as GameTrailers, GameSpot, or IGN, but what keeps us coming back is the content that the exclusive, professionally made content such as user reviews, previews and game footage that is released before the games are out.

    That’s why these sites make money, and why they succeed despite competition from huge video sites such as YouTube.

    Sorry, but if WeGame isn’t churning out exclusive content like the sites above, it’s not going to go anywhere.

  40. boople

    This is a great idea! Even though there is youtube and fraps, the intent of this is to be a service that it combines it all into just one service. Think gamefly vs blockbuster games.

    Thing is, no one really looks up game footage on purpose, only if it is something amazing or funny, and I doubt people will take the time to go through and rate all these clips.

  41. Anthony

    Probably the biggest issue I see with GameTube is that it’s coolest feature is its crippling one. While it’s interface is amazing, the fact that it is all in flash is an SEO nightmare. Search engine’s can’t crawl Flash, at least to my knowledge, so it will have very few indexed pages on search engines. Meaning I actually have to at least know someone who knows about it in order for me to discover it.

    While I’m not a big fan of Youtube clones, there is probably a certain niche value for a “Youtube for gamers,” though its screencap software only works with PC is a bit disheartening since it appears (as a gamer) that console gaming is really the burgeoning market.

    Not a terrible idea though, we’ll see how it goes. I doubt I’d use it, but if it can carve out its niche then cool.

  42. Sean

    geevee.com was the first “YouTube for Gamers” launched last summer. I personally think it’s way better.

  43. bill

    Looks good. Wish I could do the same thing for all my web sites, but then again, I am dealing with the 1980’s so it doesnt matter.

  44. Mike Abundo

    The screencast app is the special sauce of WeGame. I wouldn’t be surprised if YouTube developed and acquired a screencast app of their own, and not just for gaming.

  45. Hi-Tech-It

    How do these “businesses” even make money? Advertising? Can’t really see any other revenue model coming from them. Web 2.0 facination.

  46. Michael

    It. Rocks. Hard.

  47. Rotterdammit

    Another one you can look at is Wipido. They also offer a recording tool, a community, all the web 2.0 stuff that is required…

    http://www.wipido.com/

  48. Tim

    Anthony, thanks for the feedback!

    And right you are ;-)
    Whilst nice and really enjoyable (streaming a video AND browsing for the next one at the same time, changing language without reloading the page…), the http://www.gametube.org full-flash has been quite difficult to handle with SEO.

    As for Wegame it does indeed look like any another “youtube-like”. Well, I would not have bet on this model (in fact, I have not ^^) when it comes to gaming.
    And I too would express doubts regarding the recording feature. Unless it surpasses Fraps (which in my opinion is not the cases) it won’t work amongst the community.

    Back to Gametube, we have a very nice 2.0 version “in the box” that I’m sure all gamers will appreciate :-)

    I’m really excited about what we’re about to release, and i’m dying to tell you more… but I won’t! (my shareholders would kill me :P)

    Let’s just say gamers should appreciate :-)