GameRail Connects With The Planet

Mon, Jul 16, 2007

GameRail

The Planet, whose Insomnia 365 unit hosts many game server providers, has completed a direct connection with GameRail, a “performance network” offering low-lag connections to online gamers. With the new connection, GameRail subscribers will have low-latency connections to game servers at The Planet, which has six data centers in Houston and Dallas.

GameRail’s business model is to deliver superior performance to its subscribers by peering directly with ISPs, universities and game server providers (GSPs), reducing congestion that is often encountered on the public Interent (see diagram). Low latency (”lag”) is crucial in multiplayer first-person shooter games like CounterStrike, where a slow connection can muck up gameplay and/or leave a player at a competitive disadvantage.

With the addition of The Planet to our network, our subscribers will see a substantial increase in the desired content titles and game play environments they prefer, said GameRail’s Vice President of Business Development John Alden. The Planet’s powerful network performance and reliability provide optimum connections for serious online gamers.

The Planet has always been a destination for competitive online league gaming events, said The Planet’s Vice President of Technology Will Charnock. With this peering connection, GameRail is able to extend the reach of our customers to additional cities with a hyper-competitive, low latency and smooth connection to the online gamer.

GameRail is still in the testing phase but getting closer to “live status,” the company says. It now has network facilities in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, Palo Alto, Seattle and St. Louis. GameRail made network equipment upgrades in April. “Because of the tremendous response from both access peering and game server partners, we quickly outgrew our phase 1 network equipment even before our formal launch to end users,” the company said in a May 3 announcement. “We just completed an upgrade to Foundry Network XMR core routers in each city. These routers are carrier-class and allow GameRail to peer with a huge number of companies.”

To make it easier for its end-users to locate servers, GameRail recently worked with Game Monitor to create a web interface that identifies more than 4,000 game servers hooked up to its network.

Online multiplayer computer gaming is one of the fastest growing entertainment activities in the U.S., with more than 40 million people now playing regularly. GameRail introduced its “bypass network” in January to delivers a direct connection from the game player to the game host.

GameRail is operated by Progression LLC, a facilities-based network operator with interconnection facilities in eight major US markets including Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, Palo Alto, Seattle and St. Louis. The company’s lead investor is River City Internet Group (RCIG), a St. Louis area technology company. Robert Guller, President of The Broadband Exchange Building in St. Louis, is also a significant investor. 

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