An Attendee Uses Her Smartphone In Front Of A Fiant Microsoft Xbox Sign At The 2014 Electronic Entertainment Expo, Known as E3, in Los Angeles
An attendee uses her smartphone in front of a giant Microsoft Xbox sign at the 2014 Electronic Entertainment Expo, known as E3, in Los Angeles, California June 11, 2014. Reuters/Kevork Djansezian

The tech giant Microsoft has gone all the way to build cloud based gaming. According to this service it will avert major lag in the games. This company was long into innovation, but products never seem to see the light of day as something more has to be added or it could also be due to some other reasons.

Microsoft is making it possible to play games in the browser, not just any games but games that are played on the Xbox. More so, these are specific games played on the latest version of Xbox. According to sources from Microsoft this would be a killer gaming feature. Another source also said that the experience was about 60 frames per second.

It is very easy and quick to connect to Microsoft Azure when using the Xbox One and this could be applied to the service that Microsoft has proved with the cloud base that can work on Titanfall. This is the next step of the same concept.

Neowin reported that it is still in the unfinished stages and this service has many obstacles to overcome before it is marketed. It also added that Microsoft would have to work with publishers to licence and allow this kind of gameplay as it would cut into the revenue of PC gaming.

Microsoft will benefit from this as this would mark their entrance into the gaming business in a large scale. The additional advantage is that these games can be played on any device, including browsers like Internet Explorer and Chrome. Significant progress was made in this project and will be rolled out to users.

The speculations on the release of the features are still on; it is not known if the feature would release or if it crossed the concept stage. However, there is hope that it would release in the near future, this conclusion can be made based on the current level of testing. These are just assumptions; the final confirmation has to come from Microsoft officially.

You can keep your hopes high as the pace by that Microsoft has moved everything to Azure, indicates to a speedy progress towards this development.