No thanks. If I don’t control the hardware and the OS, that means I can’t use mods. But with the absolutely disastrous states games are released in nowadays, those are absolutely necessary.
I don't see the issue? No one is asking you to replace your PC with this. Simply an alternative way to play. Input latency is not an issue as people seem to make it out. Yes it exists but the perception is so slight that you forget about it after 5 minutes as you get lost in the game you are playing.
Cloud gaming is super cool tech and convince wise, but not a replacement or a service needed if you already have a gaming setup you are comfortable with.
In Canada, so have had some games for awhile (I was like how is this news... We already got Netflix gaming, then realised US didn't have it).
The games are fairly simplistic, I dunno if it's limitation, initial scope, but Netflix version of "cloud gaming" so far is not trying to replace console/PC/handheld gaming at all.
Really it's just some minigames that don't require install for the most part.
I think this might be different. I've seen those mini games too and have been seeing those since after their interactive content started when Bandersnatch released.
It is costly - you need to host a NVidia GPU cluster close to the clients - for the games Netflix and it's target audience they are aiming at mobile like casual games like Angry Birds or Oxygen and definitely not Starfield or Cyberpunk 2077
Stadia would have worked out if it wasn't Google with their tradition to kill products, and thinking developers would trust such a company to rewrite their Windows/DirectX games into GNU/Linux / Vulkan.
One of the last actions to try to rescue Stadia was to finally accept game development starts on Windows.
I suspect they are trying to do for gaming what they did for videos. Saying it's not going to happen is like saying video streaming just isn't going to happen. The tech was far behind but it caught up.
It already is. And it’s actually pretty good. It’s not there for multiplayer (least to me) but single player games are absolutely fine now. Xcloud is pretty good and people say GeForce now is even better.
The input latency is a secondary issue.
Cloud gaming is super cool tech and convince wise, but not a replacement or a service needed if you already have a gaming setup you are comfortable with.
for now, but companies are waiting for the future where you own nothing and are forced to pay more or lose access to everything
This horse has been beaten to a fine pulp, cloud gaming just isn't going to happen.
The games are fairly simplistic, I dunno if it's limitation, initial scope, but Netflix version of "cloud gaming" so far is not trying to replace console/PC/handheld gaming at all.
Really it's just some minigames that don't require install for the most part.
Stadia would have worked out if it wasn't Google with their tradition to kill products, and thinking developers would trust such a company to rewrite their Windows/DirectX games into GNU/Linux / Vulkan.
One of the last actions to try to rescue Stadia was to finally accept game development starts on Windows.
Playing many video games requires very low latency, which will be impossible to guarantee everywhere.
Several of the most prominent tech companies in the world have already tried this business idea, and fallen on their faces.