Google at work on Android watch, video game console: report

Google could be building both a wrist watch and a video game console, both of which would be powered by Android. 

The carpet in the French offices of Google.

Reuters

June 28, 2013

Google is at work on a video game console and a wrist-watch. 

That's the word today from The Wall Street Journal, which reports that at least one of the Android-powered devices could be unveiled as early as the fall – thus theoretically putting the console in direct competition with the forthcoming Microsoft Xbox One and the Sony PlayStation 4. The watch, meanwhile, would probably be an attempt to stave off similar hardware reportedly being developed by Apple.

 

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

There are a lot of maybes here, and the Journal has sourced its article only to "people familiar with the matter." Google isn't commenting at all. 

Still, as Rik Myslewski of the Register points out, there's plenty of reason to believe the report. 

"If Google is serious about its plans for world domination – and there's never been a scintilla of evidence that it isn't – the extension of Android into more and more types of devices is most certainly part of that plan," Mr. Myslewski writes. "In addition, Google has also not shown much compunction about moving into hardware areas in which its partners now play. Not much success, either – but that could change." 

So what would a Google video game console look like? Well, it'd likely be targeted at casual gamers, and be sold for a much lower price than the Xbox One and the PlayStation 4. And it'd also probably do double-duty as a multimedia hub. 

In related news, Ouya, the much-hyped Android video game console, hit shelves in the US and UK, with a price tag of a hundred bucks. Although the device received some praise, most reviewers were unhappy with the performance of the hardware, and particularly the controller, which was described as flukey and inaccurate. 

A majority of Americans no longer trust the Supreme Court. Can it rebuild?

"Everything about [the Ouya] screams its desire to be the noble champion of indie games," one reviewer lamented. "Instead, the console I played with... comes across more as the noble champion that some dirty, no-name mercenary humiliates in 10 seconds flat." 

For more tech news, follow us on Twitter @venturenaut.