Gaming industry analyst Michael Pachter has spoken out against Sony's PlayStation Now, saying that it has "no prayer" of working.

Loading

Speaking in the March 2014 issue of Game Informer , Pachter says, "PlayStation Now is a joke. There is no publisher that is going to license content that's less than two-years old because they would be concerned that they can't sell as many copies if they make it available for subscription or rental.""This has no prayer of working. None."Sony's head of hardware marketing, John Koller, has hit back at the criticisms, claiming that publishers are being "exceedingly bullish" about PlayStation Now's prospects. In the above video, however, we addressed the PlayStation 4's rumored future ability to emulate retro PlayStation games, and what impact it might have on PlayStation Now's success.Playstation Now is a content-streaming service that aims to bring games to PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, televisions, and mobiles devices. Beta invites for the service started to go out to select users last week.For more on the PlayStation Now, see our hands-on impressions from CES , or our comedy video feature, How Bad Could PlayStation Now Be? The full service is due to launch this summer in the US, with a UK release following next year.Are you one of the lucky gamers to have been invited to the private beta? Do you think that the PlayStation Now will be as much of a failure as Pachter suggests?

Katie Williams is a freelance writer and games journalist. You can follow her on IGN . She also tweets at @desensitisation and hopes that one day, a bird will tweet back.