Turns out if you just shrug when faced with rampant password sharing, your bandwidth takes a major hit during big-ticket episodes: HBO's wildly popular streaming service HBO Go coughed blood and keeled over (oh, come on, if that happened on the show it'd be the least violent thing on the screen) during the much-anticipated premiere of fantasy series Game of Thrones on Sunday night, leading to reactions like this:
Noooooooo!! @HBOGO is down for #GOT #hbogo #gameofthrones pic.twitter.com/hpx9hWGepV — Hughie Stone Fish (@Hughiestonefish) April 7, 2014
The show landed a series high with a whopping 6.6 million viewers, making it HBO's biggest single telecast since the 2007 series finale of flagship show The Sopranos and marked a 53 percent increase over last season's premiere (and a 23 percent increase over the finale). It was a big night generally for the network—Mike Judge's acidic tech-geek comedy Silcon Valley logged 2 million views during its first airing, rising to 2.5 million including replays. Alas, Hughie Stone Fish was not alone.
I think this sums up #GoT fans’ fears about @HBOGO tonight #GoTSeason4 pic.twitter.com/SP7ndhzEnu — Omar Kasrawi (@kasrawiNYC) April 7, 2014
The Internet, of course, is the first place anyone with an opinion goes to express his or her displeasure, but this is the third time the app has crashed under viewer strain in less than a year—most recently during the True Detective finale, and before that during the finale of last season's Game of Thrones. HBO was quick to respond:
Looks like there's trouble in the realm. Apologies for the inconvenience. We'll be providing updates, so please stay tuned. #GameofThrones — HBO GO (@HBOGO) April 7, 2014
Having trouble accessing @HBO GO? Send a raven. @GameOfThrones will be available soon on HBO On Demand with some cable providers. — HBO GO (@HBOGO) April 7, 2014
... and even managed a gentle reminder that the company also offers a linear product that some of its viewers pay for:
We're sorry for all of the trouble, but if you're an @HBO subscriber, the @GameOfThrones premiere replays at 11 PM EST. — HBO GO (@HBOGO) April 7, 2014
Service was eventually restored, but it's hard to imagine that this won't give HBO another reason to consider offering its streaming app a la carte. Cable subscriptions definitely aren't going up, and consumers are pretty enthusiastic about the product, whether or not they actually qualify as consumers in the traditional sense of someone who pays for something.