Google is launching a limited beta of its app to bring Android games to Windows PCs. Google Play Games will be available in beta in Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan today, allowing Windows PC owners to play popular Android games like Mobile Legends, Summoners War, State of Survival, and Three Kingdoms Tactics.
Players in Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan will be able to sign up to access the beta and access Googleās standalone app on Windows PCs. Google is promising āseamless gameplay sessions between a phone, tablet, Chromebook, and Windows PC,ā suggesting that youāll be able to easily resume games between multiple devices.
āPlayers can easily browse, download, and play their favorite mobile games on their PCs while taking advantage of larger screens with mouse and keyboard inputs,ā says Arjun Dayal, group product manager for Google Play Games. āNo more losing your progress or achievements when switching between devices; it just works with your Google Play Games profile!ā
Image: Google
Google Play Games syncs gameplay sessions across multiple devices.
Google Play Games will also include Play Points that can be earned while playing Android games on PCs. Google only announced its plans to bring Android games to PCs a month ago, but itās still not clear what technology the company is using to get Android games running on Windows PCs. The Google Play Games app will be a native Windows app that wonāt involve game streaming, though, and Google is opening up a developer site today that should start to provide more information for game developers.
Googleās announcement comes months after Microsoft started testing Android apps on Windows 11 PCs. Microsoft has built an underlying Windows Subsystem for Android, which is capable of running Android apps from a variety of sources. Microsoft uses it in partnership with Amazon to allow native installs of games and apps from the Amazon Appstore on Windows, but despite workarounds, Google Play isnāt officially supported yet.