These 3 Tech Giants Are More Involved in Gaming Than You Think

Video games don't get the headlines for technology giants like Facebook (NASDAQ: FB), Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL), and Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN), but make no mistake -- these companies are aggressively competing to control a meaningful share of the $100 billion video game industry.

The video game industry is growing about 6% per year, with mobile gaming serving as one of the key drivers of that growth. In addition to mobile gaming, two new markets -- e-sports and virtual reality (VR) -- are small but growing fast.

IMAGE SOURCE: PIXABAY.

Game developers need the cloud

People are beginning to spend as much time playing games as they do on social media or on streaming services likeNetflix. One reason is that technology advancements on smartphones and tablets are gradually making mobile games more complex, like console or PC games. But, this growth in mobile gaming is placing a burden on game developers without the expertise to provide online infrastructure that can support the huge spikes in usage when new updates or content are released for a particular game.

Developers are turning to cloud solutions to split the processing burden of a game between cloud servers and the mobile device. The results: a much smoother gaming experience for the player, and more demand for cloud providers such as Alphabet's Google Cloud Platform and Amazon Web Services.

The mobile gaming market generated nearly 40% of the total video game industry's revenue in 2016, and revenue from mobile gaming increased 18% in 2016, to about $40 billion. Mobile is expected to be a key driver of the industry's growth for the foreseeable future.

E-sports

The concept of someone paying to go to a venue to watch others compete in a video game might seem strange to most, but this is a $1 billion market that is growing fast.

The global e-sports audience is estimated to be 385 million and could grow to 500 million by 2020, according to Newzoo. Because the great majority of e-sports fans watch competitions online, the e-sports opportunity plays right into the hands of companies like Alphabet and Facebook that already have social platforms in place to connect people with content.

Amazon, however, took a big step ahead when it acquired Twitch.tv for $970 million in 2014. Twitch is a platform where users can live-stream their PC games to other gaming enthusiasts, and ithas a staggering 100 million monthly viewers. The game streaming site also broadcasts e-sports tournaments around the world. Competition between Twitch and Alphabet's YouTube has become tense lately. Through 2016, Twitch had an important partnership with ESL -- the world's largest e-sports company -- to broadcast e-sports events. However, ESL recently moved exclusively to YouTube, a sign that YouTube is gaining ground on Twitch.

And then there's Facebook, with its network of 1.2 billion daily users. There's no doubt Facebook could be a sleeping giant in e-sports viewing, but it has a ways to go to catch up to its competitors. Unlike Twitch and YouTube, Facebook has no dedicated streaming page for gaming.

The social-media giant is making progress with its recent release of the Facebook Live video feature for computers, after only being available on its mobile app. This will allow gamers to stream live gameplay to followers, but it lacks the monetization features provided by Twitch and YouTube for popular game streamers.

Virtual Reality

While Facebook is trailing YouTube and Twitch in e-sports, Facebook is investing heavily in VR, which is expected to become a $45 billion market by 2025, according to Grand View Research. The social-media giant purchased Oculus -- the maker of the Rift headset -- for $2 billion in 2014.

Oculus, Alphabet, Sony, Samsung Electronics, and HTC all shipped VR headsets in 2016, and the combined results appear to have fallen below expectations, but that really depends on who you talk to.

Company executives like NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg expressed satisfaction with the first year of the VR market. NVIDIA develops the powerful graphics processors that help gamers play the more graphically intense VR games. Jensen Huang recently told analysts on a conference call:

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, on a recent conference call, made it clear that Oculus would probably not be profitable for quite some time, as the company continues to invest in VR development:

The technology promises not only to deliver a new immersive gaming experiences, but also to change the way people communicate with each other. However, it's not likely to catch for a while, at least until headsets get cheaper.

The video game industry has a solid ecosystem

The video game industry is doing well on its own, with the investment put into it by game publishers like Activision Blizzard and Electronic Arts. But social-media giants and Amazon committing resources to the industry is a great sign for the future of gaming.

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Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. John Ballard owns shares of, and The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends, Activision Blizzard and Nvidia. The Motley Fool also owns shares of and recommends Alphabet (A and C shares), Amazon, Facebook, and Netflix. The Motley Fool recommends Electronic Arts. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.