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Megaport Blog

Early Warning Signs Your Network Needs a Refresh Introducing Megaport DDoS Protection A Guide to 400G Connectivity A Guide to NAT Gateway A Guide to Cloud Storage How the Data Center Is Evolving in 2026 What to Expect When Attending Your First Network Operator Group (NOG) Nine Ways to Connect to Cloud Using Private Connectivity Migrate Your On-premises to the Cloud: A Step-by-Step Guide How to Lower Your Egress Fees in 2026 How to Achieve Data Sovereignty in Europe Redefining the Edge with Cisco and Megaport How to Reduce Latency in Your Multicloud Environment Introducing Megaport High-Speed Cross-Cloud Encryption Are Businesses Leaving the Cloud? Using Meraki and Megaport Virtual Edge for Multicloud Networking Equinix Metal® is Going Away: Here’s What You Can Do Introducing Megaport On-ramp as a Service Megaport’s Full Solution Portfolio Is Coming to India New Bare-metal GPU Instance Now Available with NVIDIA RTX Pro 6000 A Look Back at 2025: Megaport's Biggest Updates Megaport Expands Into India With Extreme IX Your 2026 Predictions From AWS re:Invent 2025 Top NaaS Trends for 2026 What is IPsec? When to Move From Public Internet to Private Connectivity Megaport and Latitude.sh: Bringing Compute and Connectivity Together Improve Your Microsoft ExpressRoute Resilience with Megaport Comparing Ways to Connect to AWS What is API-First Networking? The Hidden Cost of Running Cloud-Hosted SD-WAN for IaaS Overcoming NaaS Integration Challenges Introducing SCION with Anapaya and Megaport How to Use Network as a Service to Future-Proof Your Network Introducing 400G Ports All the As-a-services, Compared Introducing Megaport IPsec Tunnels High Score: Megaport Hits 1,000 Locations A Guide to Colocation Data Centers Maximizing Peering Through Flow Analysis Build Resilient Networks for AI Production Workloads Introducing Packet Filtering on Megaport Cloud Router Building Resilient Government IT: Strategies for Secure, Compliant, and Scalable Connectivity Future-Proofing Government IT Telstra Programmable Network Is Being Discontinued. Here’s How to Migrate The Future of WAN Design Depends on Network as a Service (NaaS) Cisco Webex Edge Connect Launches on Megaport Voice and Video Exchange How to Prepare for APRA CPS 230 Comparing the SD-WAN Licensing Needs of Major Vendors A Guide to Improving Network Performance How Latitude.sh, Wasabi, and Megaport Unlock Cost-Effective Multicloud Four Ways to Connect Your Clouds SD-WAN and MPLS: Weighing the Similarities, Differences, and Benefits A Guide to Network as a Service (NaaS) How to Arrange Bilateral Peering Sessions Comparing Major SD-WAN Vendors Software Defined Networking in Healthcare Deploying A Global Network in Minutes With Megaport AWS Direct Connect Gateway (DGW) Data Transfer Outbound Rules Bilateral and Multilateral Peering: What’s the Difference? Multi-Region SD-WAN: Why Megaport SDCI is the Right Choice Microsoft Azure is Going Secure by Default. Are You Ready? How Megaport and Vultr Are Solving the Enterprise AI Challenge Introducing Megaport NAT Gateway A Guide to AWS Security Tools How to Deploy Amazon Bedrock Using AWS Direct Connect and Megaport Azure Private Link, Explained Introducing 100G MCRs Simplifying Hybrid and Multicloud Network Connectivity How to Fix Poor AWS Latency A Look Back at 2024: Megaport’s Biggest Updates Your 2025 Predictions From AWS re:Invent 2024 Six Ways to Get a More Resilient Network in 2025 Multicloud Security: Challenges and Solutions The Real Cost of High Network Latency Why Brazil is Your Key to Unlocking Business Growth in Latin America Why You Need Integrated Network Security Six Key Differences Between Major Cloud Providers How to Automate Your Megaport Infrastructure With APIs Why Italy is Europe’s Next Cloud Expansion Hotspot How to Lower Your Cloud Costs Peering: How Local Is Local? Introducing Megaport AI Exchange Two Scenarios for Hybrid Multicloud Deployment With IBM Cloud and Microsoft Azure How to Connect Equinix and Digital Realty Megaport Enables Microsoft Azure ExpressRoute Metro for More Resilient Network Connectivity Executives, Here’s What Your Network Team Wants You to Know Easy Ways to Interconnect Your Network The Role of the Data Center in Your Network 100G VXC Expansion: Now Available From 597 Data Centers Worldwide Top 10 How-To Guides To Improve Your Network Comparing Encryption in Transit Options Comparing Generative AI Offerings From Major Cloud Providers A Sustainable Business Strategy Starts With Your Network Solutions to Common API Issues With Megaport Transforming Financial Connectivity: Introducing Megaport Financial Services Exchange (FSX) Megaport Enhancing Connectivity in Adelaide Megaport’s Latest Portal Features and Functionalities Automate Your Network Deployments With The New Megaport Terraform Provider A Recap of the Megaport World Tour 2024
The Future of Cloud Gaming Infrastructure
2021-09-19 · via Megaport Blog

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, more people are turning to cloud gaming—powered by cloud infrastructure—for entertainment. What does its future hold?

According to a survey of 4,000 US adults conducted this year by Entertainment Software Association and Ipsos, more than half of gamers (55%) said they played more during the pandemic, and most players (90%) said they will continue playing after the country opens up. Cloud gaming, or gaming on demand, is a type of online gaming that runs video games on remote servers and streams them directly to a user’s device, or more colloquially, playing a game remotely from a cloud. Many of the major gaming and tech companies have launched cloud gaming services, such as Microsoft’s Xbox Cloud Gaming, Sony’s PlayStation Now, and Google’s Stadia.

Suffice it to say, gaming is becoming a more integral part of our lives. In June 2022, there is a global total of 3.24 billion video game players of all ages. With high-speed internet connections becoming widespread, online games have grown exponentially. Online play can include session-based multiplayer matches, massive multiplayer virtual worlds, and single-player experiences. Both game development and game playing, particularly online games, are powered by cloud technology.

The Entertainment Software Association and Ipsos survey also found that video games were a source of stress relief (55%) and distraction (48%). Seventy-one percent of parents surveyed said video games served as an escape and a break for children, while two-thirds of parents (66%) said video games made the transition to distance learning easier for their children.

Read ESG’s report on scalable, secure, and reliable infrastructure for gaming.

Online gaming in the cloud

In development, games are rendered in high-performance computing environments enabled by the major cloud service providers (CSPs). And when those games are played online with players who could be next to you on your couch or thousands of miles away on another continent, they are served from network infrastructure, which is often a combination of cloud-based resources, edge devices, and on-premises equipment.

A recent research report from ESG found that 78% of gaming providers currently use public cloud infrastructure services to deliver their games to players. Gaming companies are challenged with providing an optimal gaming experience, which requires a high-performance agile network built with resiliency and high availability in mind. An optimal gaming experience means minimal downtime, low latency, and reduced lag.

The benefits of utilizing cloud infrastructure to deliver games are manifold. In the past, online gaming ran on a client-server model, which required the purchase and maintenance of dedicated on-premises or colocated servers, a significant capital expenditure that only large studios and publishers could afford. In addition, companies needed to conduct extensive capacity planning to prevent overspending on fixed hardware while at the same time meeting customer demand for the games.

Read Google Cloud’s Overview of Cloud Infrastructure.

Today’s cloud-based compute resources, however, allow for game developers and publishers to turn up infrastructure on demand (i.e. use Infrastructure as a Service or IaaS) to avoid costly upfront capital investments in the hardware of yesteryear.

Gaming architecture, explained

The following diagram from Google Cloud shows the high-level components of how online gaming is typically architected from a network perspective.

Google Cloud Platform gaming diagram

An overview of cloud gaming infrastructure from Google Cloud.

G-Core Labs uses Megaport to power MMO game

G-Core Labs, a Luxembourg-based global IT solutions provider, used Megaport to help build out a robust cloud-based infrastructure for an industry-leading game developer, Wargaming. As a result, Wargaming became the World Guinness Record holder for “Most Players Online Simultaneously on one MOG (multiplayer online game) Server – 1,114,000 online players.”

Read the G-Core Labs case study here.

Seeking scalable, cost-effective cloud connectivity

Depending on the time of day and year, gaming traffic can fluctuate drastically. Daily peak time is typically between 7pm and 11pm when most players come online, with an even higher peak during major holidays like Christmas and summer break. With traditional means of bandwidth sourcing, G-Core Labs had to anticipate, pre-provision, and commit to larger amounts of bandwidth in order to meet peak end-user demand. This inevitably drove overall connectivity costs up and was of particular concern in Southeast Asia, where international bandwidth costs run high.

Traditional providers typically require much longer provisioning time and more manual procedures to complete a service request for cloud connectivity. Lead times vary greatly and the process of getting an account setup and submitting an order could take several weeks. Capacity choices were also limited to a defined set of bandwidth tiers, making it impossible for real-time bandwidth scaling, either up or down, where and when G-Core Labs needed it.

Improving network performance and minimizing latency

Megaport helped G-Core Labs improve Wargaming’s network performance by delivering the highest throughput and lowest possible latency for their flagship Massive Multiplayer Online (MMO) game “World of Tanks,” providing an optimal gaming experience to their players. Connectivity to Megaport’s private global Software Defined Network kept Round Trip Time (RTT) and packet loss to a minimum (far less than 150ms), which was more essential than ever to support a growing base of richer game versions and diverse users in Asia-Pacific.

World of Tanks video game graphic

“The nature of our business demands minimal latency interconnection with guaranteed yet flexible bandwidth at reasonable prices. We’ve researched and found no such provider in Asia except Megaport, who provides true flexibility to scale connectivity real-time, up or down at a per Mbps granularity,” said Andre Reitenbach, Managing Director, G-Core Labs.

Through a combination of peering on Megaport’s Internet Exchange (MegaIX) in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Sydney, and data center connectivity between Hong Kong and Singapore, G-Core Labs was able to carry their high volume data traffic through direct and better routes to meet the high performance demands of Wargaming’s players.

Why You Need a Scalable Enterprise Network in 2021.

Cost-efficient cloud infrastructure

Megaport’s on-demand and unique “choose any speed, for as long as you need” bandwidth model has also provided G-Core Labs the freedom and control to consume exactly what they need at any given time. This has greatly simplified their planning and increased their network agility. A one-week bandwidth cost comparison with a daily peak of three hours resulted in 82% savings.

Megaport’s gaming ecosystem

Cloud technology has been at the center of digital transformation for the gaming industry for the past decade. The continuing impact of COVID-19 has only accelerated demand for gaming in our everyday lives. Megaport’s Network as a Service (NaaS) supports some of the most popular and widely played games in the world, and our gaming ecosystem contains some of the largest game developers on the planet.

Contact your account representative to learn more about Megaport’s solutions for the gaming industry.

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