( trey | 2019. 11. 24., v – 08:56 )

What I'm perhaps just as impressed by is performance over wireless. Testing using a rubbish Kubuntu laptop, across the house and down a level right at the back. Wireless speed there gave me about 50Mbps down, so putting Stadia into the "Limited" mode for 720p, even there the experience was also very good. I was fully expecting there to have a ton of input lag, but it felt about the same as my PC hooked directly to the router.

Van némi lag még, így ha hardcore FPS játékos vagy, akkor nem. Akkor éri meg, ha van egy darab szar géped, amin az életben nem futna AAA játék és néha játszanál egyet. Ha nem akarsz manapság nem ritka, 50 GB-ot letölteni, hogy játssz 10 percet.

I think it's important to understand what Google have achieved already with Stadia is quite significant. Load up a browser and play a AAA game on Linux, macOS and Windows with only a tiny amount of loading and no sitting and waiting for 50GB of updates. Compared to a lot of experiences with new games on Steam, it almost feels a little magic.

A visszajelzések szerint jobb, mint amire számítottak, de ettől még nem fogja leváltani a helyileg telepített játékokat.

However, at least speaking for me personally, I don't think this will be replacing a locally installed game any time soon. While the input lag was somewhat minimal, playable and quite fun it was just enough to show me that it's not something I'm going to be spending lots of money on extra games. Barely though, I have been seriously impressed with it. If they manage to bring it down a little more, it would be ridiculously good.