We try Discord’s new video features, ask if game-chat app will ever make money

Enlarge (credit: Discord)
Discord probably didn't need to add more major features to keep its 45 million users happy. The free text and voice-chat service has exploded in roughly two years of public testing, thanks to its simple "chat with my gaming friends" system that resembles a more voice-heavy version of Slack.
But just as the service begins to reach critical mass-and invites more questions about how the heck its "no ads, no required subscription" model will ever make money-the Discord team has responded with a major update: new video-sharing features that Discord insists will also remain totally free for all users.
"Do it in a bathtub"When Discord co-founder and CMO Eros Resmini needs to conduct important business, he prefers to conduct it via his own app. The free text and voice-chat service works on a bunch of hardware, and if you're not interested in installing the Discord app on Windows, macOS, iOS, or Android, you can access its every feature via a simple, instant-load Web-browser interface. The idea: no matter what platform you are playing a game on, you can use a phone or computer to connect to friends, coordinate multiplayer sessions, and instantly sync up all-important "party" voice chat (without jumping through the hoops of other exclusive gaming-network services).
Read 31 remaining paragraphs | Comments