The GamePop Mini, a new subscription-based Android console from BlueStacks, is coming to market with an interesting business model: It's "free" after purchasing a 12-month subscription at $7 per month. In total, the GamePop Mini comes to $84 - less than the Ouya and a tad more than the GameStick - and has secured 500 "popular mobile game partners."

Even though it is powered by Android, an interesting piece of proprietary software called Looking Glass allows iOS apps to run on the console. "[Porting is] not easy, but I would submit it's not hard, relatively speaking," BlueStacks' Head of Marketing and Business Development John Garguilo told Engadget. "If you're a developer and you've built your app and put it on iOS, it's your app. You built it, you own the bits and you own all the intellectual property. If you apply Looking Glass' layer, you can put [your app] on a TV with us."

The GamePop Mini has a tentative launch window of "this winter." Subscription is required to access GamePop Mini services and if you cancel your subscription before the end of the first year, there is a $25 restocking fee.Continue reading Subscription console GamePop Mini nestles between GameStick, Ouya
Subscription console GamePop Mini nestles between GameStick, Ouya originally appeared on Joystiq on Fri, 28 Jun 2013 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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