Facebook has finally made its move against one of Amazon's biggest properties

Say what you will about people watching other people play video games live. The numbers don't lie.

  • 1.7 million people broadcast game streams every month on the largest streaming-game service, Amazon-owned Twitch, according to data from 2015.

  • An average of 100 million people tune in to those streams. For comparison, there are just over 40 million PlayStation 4 consoles in the wild.

  • Amazon thought Twitch was impressive enough that it bought the company for just shy of $1 billion back in 2014.

Twitch is available on every game console to either watch games played or to broadcast your own. It's available on phones, tablets, computers, and set-top boxes like the Apple TV. It's the standard broadcast network of eSports tournaments the world over. As an added bonus, it's got the might of Amazon behind it. Who could challenge that?

Who indeed:

Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg

(Robert Galbraith/Reuters)

Nearly one-quarter of the earth's human population, 1.6 billion people, use Facebook. When the company makes even a small change to its service — The Social Network — it can be tremendously impactful.

In the case of Facebook Live, a tool that enables any Facebook user to instantly live stream their life from their phone, Facebook made a huge change. Suddenly, there are notifications from friends, publications, celebrities, and anyone else you're connected to on Facebook (there's a way to turn that off). They're somewhere! Doing something! Right now! And you can watch it — live!

facebook live
facebook live

(Everybody is live! WHO WILL YOU CHOOSE?!Twitter/Colin Jones)

In June, Facebook announced a partnership with gaming powerhouse Blizzard Entertainment: All of Blizzard's games, from "World of Warcraft" to "Diablo 3" to "Hearthstone" to "Overwatch," are instantly streamable — live! — on Facebook Live.

You push a button, there's a short countdown (3 ... 2 ... 1), and you're off to the races, livestreaming your game directly to Facebook in high-resolution.

The service is available starting right now, Blizzard announced on Friday. The service was unveiled with this video on — where else? — Blizzard's Facebook page:

It's easy to imagine just such a service on everything from your iPhone to that PlayStation 4 in the living room.

Facebook agrees.

"Imagine every game that people are playing, regardless of platform, they have the opportunity to do one-button 'Go Live' to Facebook. That would be pretty awesome!" Facebook's director of games partnerships, Leo Olebe, told Business Insider in an interview earlier this year.

So we pushed. Is Facebook making that concept a reality?

"Yes, yes, it is," he told us. "Gamers are everywhere. They're on every different device. They're playing any time, and we want to be where gamers are."