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2 votes
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Xbox Cloud Gaming will let you stream your own games in November
16 votes -
Xbox gaming coming to Amazon Fire TV: Play more games, no console needed
12 votes -
More ways to play your GOG games – we’re teaming up with Luna cloud streaming service!
16 votes -
Netflix is reportedly exploring adding in-game ads to its gaming service
43 votes -
Netflix is testing a game streaming solution in Canada and the UK
19 votes -
PS5 cloud streaming launches this month for PlayStation Plus Premium members
6 votes -
Microsoft to sell off Activision cloud gaming rights to Ubisoft in bid for UK approval
25 votes -
Baldur’s Gate 3 could have saved Google Stadia
40 votes -
Microsoft's $68.7bn (£55bn) deal to buy US video game company Activision Blizzard has been blocked in the UK by the Competition and Markets Authority
13 votes -
A gift from the Stadia team & Bluetooth controller functionality info
14 votes -
Stadia is shutting down
38 votes -
All-new PlayStation Plus tiers launches in June
4 votes -
Google Stadia has reportedly been demoted
21 votes -
PlayStation plans new service to take on Xbox Game Pass
5 votes -
Tell your hopes and experiences with cloud gaming
So I just upgraded to an M1 Mac Mini. I was a little iffy on it, part of me wanted to build a PC just to play games but I really like MacOS and I mostly play on PS5 and the Switch with the PC only...
So I just upgraded to an M1 Mac Mini. I was a little iffy on it, part of me wanted to build a PC just to play games but I really like MacOS and I mostly play on PS5 and the Switch with the PC only being for indie titles and stuff that only works with a keyboard and mouse like RTS, 4x, or city builders. I just don't play PC games enough to prioritize gaming as a use case in buying a computer, but I also really like RTS and city builder games.
I figured WINE and Parallels would meet most of my gaming needs but my forays into WINE have been frustrating and buggy, and this reddit thread about what works on Parallels is, frankly, just kind of sad to look at. What's worse, apparently the new Age of Empires has some kind of pathfinding instruction set that ONLY works with x86 architecture. So it won't work under any kind of virtualization or emulation.
Enter Cloud gaming. It seems the big contenders right now are ShadowPC, GeForce Now, and Paperspace. Has anyone tried these? When I last costed these out Shadow was only around $15-$20 a month which was almost a no-brainer. But it seems to have gone up to $30 a month now, which gets costly enough to where it almost seems like I'd rather get a Steam Deck. Paperspace is like $10 per month plus another ~$1 per hour of play, which would probably end up cheapest for how little I play. But how it is in terms of configuration and latency I have no idea.
7 votes -
GeForce Now cloud gaming service adds new RTX 3080 membership tier, supporting streaming at up to 1440p and 120 FPS
10 votes -
BlueStacks X is a new and free way to play Android games in your browser
8 votes -
Ighor July "unlocks" GeForce Now
9 votes -
As it turns out, “Netflix Gaming” isn’t a streaming service
7 votes -
Xbox and Xbox Game Pass are coming to more screens
7 votes -
Do you use game streaming services? Which ones and why or why not?
I wanted to get a general discussion going on the opinions of game streaming services. This is a potentially huge market and the big companies out there are really trying to break into this...
I wanted to get a general discussion going on the opinions of game streaming services. This is a potentially huge market and the big companies out there are really trying to break into this market. I personally use google stadia and love it, there is a slight amount of latency in movements but it feels no different than a larger dead zone to me.
I love the idea of game streaming as it brings more games to more platforms like Linux, macOS and mobile devices. I know the big argument against them is that you don’t own the games, but from my perspective, you don’t own the games on steam either, you own the right to play someone else’s game just like with Google stadia or Luna or xcloud. If you want to own an actual copy then you have to buy the game from a vendor like gog or itch.io.
So let me know your opinions on this market, do you think it’s good, bad, or somewhere in between and why? If you play on any of these services what are your thoughts and experiences? Has it worked well for you and do you see yourself using services like this in the future? I genuinely am curious as it’s a completely different mindset than what we’re used too and it can really disrupt a market that hasn’t seen proper innovation in years.
13 votes -
LittleBigPlanet has been near-unplayable for a long time, and no one's said why
14 votes -
Stadia developers can't fix the bugs in their own game because Google fired them
13 votes -
Microsoft xCloud for Web - First look
3 votes -
Google Stadia shuts down internal studios, changing business focus
24 votes -
Stadia offering a free Premiere Edition bundle for US YouTube Premium members
7 votes -
PAC-MAN Mega Tunnel Battle demo - Google Stadia
5 votes -
Cloud gaming’s history of false starts and promising reboots
5 votes -
Microsoft is bringing xCloud to iOS via the web
5 votes -
The new Chromecast with Google TV won’t officially support Stadia at launch
5 votes -
Amazon announces Luna cloud gaming service
6 votes -
App Store review guidelines on streaming games
12 votes -
Geforce NOW Beta on Chromebook - play.geforcenow.com
6 votes -
Apple won't allow game streaming services like xCloud and Stadia into the App Store
20 votes -
Microsoft's decision to bundle xCloud as part of Games Pass Ultimate shows how game streaming's role could be a complement instead of competition
3 votes -
Amazon and Google are in games for the wrong reasons
10 votes -
Razer’s Kishi turns your phone into a Nintendo Switch lookalike that can play Google Stadia
5 votes -
Steam Cloud Play (Beta) appears in partner documentation
8 votes -
Stadia version of Doom Eternal's lag re-tested, plus tests of The Division 2, Borderlands 3, Ghost Recon Breakpoint, and more
5 votes -
Games from Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment, XBOX Game Studios, Codemasters and Klei Entertainment will be removed from GeForce Now on April 24
7 votes -
A two-month free trial of Stadia Pro with nine games is now available
7 votes -
Google now giving away three months of Stadia access to new Chromecast buyers
9 votes -
Google Stadia announces five upcoming games, including three "First on Stadia" titles
8 votes -
Nvidia's GeForce Now streaming service leaves beta - Uses many existing game purchases, supports ray-tracing, and has a time-limited free trial
12 votes -
Google Stadia announces plans to add over 120 games this year, including over ten exclusives
17 votes -
"Randomizers" are breathing new life into old games
18 votes -
Google Stadia - 4K image quality analysis and latency tests
11 votes -
CNET reports Amazon is working on a game streaming competitor to Google Stadia
7 votes -
Steam Remote Play Together is now in beta - A new feature that lets you play your couch co-op games with friends over the internet
19 votes