BACKEND AS A SERVICE FOR GAMES

A game backend you can operate and evolve

Managed identity, player data, progression, live operations and production infrastructure.

Use a managed operating model without surrendering architecture visibility or creating unsupported platform claims.

We begin with the experience that must work, make ownership and failure paths explicit, then choose the smallest architecture that can be operated responsibly. Every recommendation is evaluated against player impact, delivery risk, team capacity and run cost.

CAPABILITY MAP

From decision to production.

01

Game-aware service design

Clarify constraints, success criteria and technical boundaries.

02

Client and platform integration

Build in visible increments with ownership close to the code.

03

Operational tooling and telemetry

Test performance, recovery and real operating conditions.

04

Measured scaling and cost control

Leave documentation, observability and a maintainable next step.

TECHNICAL PRIORITIES

Architecture should make failure understandable.

We model versioning, retries, authority, observability, deployment and recovery before traffic turns assumptions into incidents.

  • Explicit ownership and data boundaries
  • Measurable performance budgets
  • Safe deployment and rollback
  • Operational tools for the team
  • Cost visibility without premature complexity

FAQ

Questions specific to this path.

How does a game backend you can operate and evolve start?

We begin with current state, constraints, success criteria and the highest-risk assumption before defining implementation.

Can you join an existing team?

Yes. Ownership boundaries, codebase condition and delivery risk are mapped before production systems change.

What happens after delivery?

Handover, embedded capacity or managed operation are agreed around the product and internal team.

RELATED PROOF & PATHS

Continue the technical evaluation.

NEXT STEP

Bring us the constraint, not a polished brief.

A technical lead will review the current state and recommend the smallest useful next step.

Start a project
Start a project