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For those that don't know, Google is launching Google Stadia on 19th November.
Google Stadia is streaming gameplay up to 4k 60Hz. They say for 4k you'll need a minimum of 35mbs download speeds.
You can stream to almost any device, TV, tablet, phone, PC, Laptop, almost anything. It even supports MOUSE AND KEYBOARD!!!! (for me that's the one reason I don't use consoles, just find controllers too damn slow).
Google Stadia will be available in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland regions first, with more territories being added in 2020 and beyond.
The opening list of games are as follows:
It looks set to be pretty interesting. To get in on release day, you have to have bought a premiere pack which includes controllers and other things. For the rest of us we'll have to wait a little longer. The premiere packs sold out worldwide within days so it does seem that demand is there if google can pull it off.
I've got a 5 year old gaming laptop which I'm not interested in upgrading because I now use it to stream over my LAN from my gaming PC which is relatively capable. The 4th Gen i7 is still totally capable for everyday uses and there's no need to bin it just yet if GPU performance isn't in the equation. If Google Stadia pays off, that completely renews my laptop for another good 5 years or so until the CPU starts getting too slow.
On the back of this, Steam have started developing their own streaming service, as well as Microsofts xCloud
What are your thoughts? Has anyone bought a premiere pack? Anyone looking to use this?
Google Stadia is streaming gameplay up to 4k 60Hz. They say for 4k you'll need a minimum of 35mbs download speeds.
You can stream to almost any device, TV, tablet, phone, PC, Laptop, almost anything. It even supports MOUSE AND KEYBOARD!!!! (for me that's the one reason I don't use consoles, just find controllers too damn slow).
Google Stadia will be available in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland regions first, with more territories being added in 2020 and beyond.
The opening list of games are as follows:
- Assassin's Creed Odyssey
- Attack on Titan 2
- Baldur's Gate 3
- Borderlands 3
- Darksiders Genesis
- Destiny 2: The Collection
- Destroy All Humans
- Doom Eternal
- Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2
- Elder Scrolls Online
- Farming Simulator 19
- Final Fantasy 15
- Football Manager 2020
- Get Packed
- Ghost Recon Breakpoint
- GRID
- Gylt
- Just Dance 2020
- Kine
- Metro Exodus
- Mortal Kombat 11
- Orcs Must Die! 3
- Rage 2
- Rise of the Tomb Raider
- Samurai Showdown
- Shadow of the Tomb Raider
- Superhot
- The Division 2
- Thumper
- Tomb Raider
- Trials Rising
- Windjammers 2
- Wolfenstein: Youngblood
Google wants to reduce Stadia lag with 'negative latency'
Plenty of gamers are skeptical about cloud-based gaming. Fast internet connections just aren't prevalent enough, the argument goes, and lag will kill the gameplay experience. Google is diving in head first with Stadia, though. In an interview with Edge, Stadia's VP of Engineering Madj Bakar said...
www.engadget.com
It looks set to be pretty interesting. To get in on release day, you have to have bought a premiere pack which includes controllers and other things. For the rest of us we'll have to wait a little longer. The premiere packs sold out worldwide within days so it does seem that demand is there if google can pull it off.
I've got a 5 year old gaming laptop which I'm not interested in upgrading because I now use it to stream over my LAN from my gaming PC which is relatively capable. The 4th Gen i7 is still totally capable for everyday uses and there's no need to bin it just yet if GPU performance isn't in the equation. If Google Stadia pays off, that completely renews my laptop for another good 5 years or so until the CPU starts getting too slow.
On the back of this, Steam have started developing their own streaming service, as well as Microsofts xCloud
Hands-on with Microsoft’s xCloud game streaming service
Early signs of promise, but more games needed
www.theverge.com
Valve appears to be working on a “Steam Cloud Gaming” service
Sounds like a natural expansion of Valve’s current “home PC” streaming offerings.
arstechnica.com
What are your thoughts? Has anyone bought a premiere pack? Anyone looking to use this?