Taiwan's Acer computers is looking to expand past its image as a budget notebook maker with a planned gaming-centric PC, according to a recent interview. Details are scarce, but company VP James T. Wong touted the planned gaming machine's basis in "open standards," compared to closed, proprietary systems of the likes of Microsoft and Nintendo (perhaps Mr. Wong has not heard about the system-opening efforts of XNA and Wii Ware).
Of course, an "open standard" gaming PC could be anything from a simple PC Gaming Alliance-approved system to a full-on Phantom-style set-top box that can run any PC game. We're certainly hoping its the latter -- headline writing hasn't been nearly as fun without the Phantom to kick around.
[Via Engadget]
Reader Comments (51)
Posted: Apr 12th 2008 2:49PM hvnlysoldr said
PC Gaming Alliance and such have the wrong priority. First make PC games more compatible on older and medium capable machines. That increases the install base. That allows PC gamers to spend more on games than hardware rigs. I won't buy PC games because my old computer just can't manage them reasonably.
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