• RejZoR
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    1083 days ago

    I mean, of course battery life is better when you’re essentially just streaming video…

      • @mriswith@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Didn’t this give it away?:

        … unlocking the full potential of Valve’s handheld device for cloud gaming.

        The app is now available, and gamers can stream titles on the Steam Deck at up to 4K 60 frames per second …

        • @NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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          252 days ago

          Sure, it would have, but I was following the time-honored tradition of reading only the title and the Lemmy comments without clicking through to the full article. If that comment hadn’t been there, it is possible that my intrigue and confusion would have been sufficient to make me betray my legacy and bring shame to my family by actually reading the linked article. Disaster avoided!

          • @socphoenix@midwest.social
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            22 days ago

            They sell a dock that supports up to 4K for tvs, I’d guess for that. It’s capable of doing that fairly well on less intensive games.

  • @yesman@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I read the headline and made a bad assumption that would have been corrected if I read the article.

    That’s awesome! I never installed this crap on Windows, now I get to skip installing it on Linux. Keep up the good work.

  • redfellow
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    202 days ago

    I’ve yet to stream a game from a device to another without being annoyed by latency and compression artifacts.

    It’s been ok enough for games like Civilization etc. but generally it’s just shit. The hardware just isn’t there yet.

      • @overload@sopuli.xyz
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        22 days ago

        Chiaki and Moonlight are both great solutions if your Wifi signal is strong and your host device has a wired connection in my experience. Do people with good internet up speeds set it up to stream from WAN? This would be equivalent to that IMO.

      • @rollerbang@lemmy.world
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        32 days ago

        In my experience it only works well for 10-15 minutes. Then it needs a reconnect. Kind of same with the native app.

    • @OneOrTheOtherDontAskMe@lemmy.world
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      42 days ago

      I’ve had good luck with Sunshine/Moonlight, though I haven’t tried it in the last 6 months or so. Was using it to stream my much beefier desktop to my Rog Ally while in bed when I hurt my back.

      There was a slight latency, like, enough to notice that I notice, but hardly enough to catch when fully engaged. But the PC was getting like 200 frames in the games I was playing and that was limited to the 120fps limit I set for Moonlight (i think it let’s you bypass this to go higher, but I didn’t want to at the time).

    • miss phant
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      32 days ago

      For me the biggest gripe is frame pacing, can’t seem to ever get it to be as consistent as running on-device.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      latency and compression artifacts

      At this point it makes no difference because with all the upscaling and fake frames Nvidia is pushing you’ve got that when running locally, too.

  • sylver_dragon
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    223 days ago

    Um yay, I guess. I’m always for more options. And maybe there is a market out there for the “game from the cloud” idea. Personally though, I’d rather just play a game on the Steam Deck directly. Or, if that’s somehow not an option, stream the game from my own PC to my TV via SteamLink. In no world do I want to pay for a subscription to play games on a device where I can just play that game locally.

    • @CatsGoMOW@lemmy.world
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      143 days ago

      If you have the ability to play every game you’d want, then yeah you likely have no need for this. But I’ve used GeForce Now to either play games on low-spec PCs or for a period of time when I only had access to a MacBook. Also, not every game will run on Linux (or if it does it may not perform quite as well), so that’s another potential use case.

    • @FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au
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      22 days ago

      Personally though, I’d rather just play a game on the Steam Deck directly. Or, if that’s somehow not an option, stream the game from my own PC to my TV via SteamLink.

      Stuff like this is great for when you don’t have the hardware required to play the game at that quality (or at all), or you want to try a game before installing it.

  • @walderan@sh.itjust.works
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    102 days ago

    I’d be tempted giving it a shot, since it has a free tier, if it didn’t involve giving my personal and steam data to nvidia of all companies.

  • @network_switch@lemmy.ml
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    112 days ago

    I’ve subbed a few times over the years. Usually one off summer months when I want to game but don’t want to turn on a really hot PC without AC. Or when they give some big deal for 6 months. It’s high quality and very responsive for me. Good to see a Steam Deck app. Going to check sometime if they do any limitations on Linux installations that aren’t detected as a Steam Deck

  • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    113 days ago

    I was down in Texas for Dreamhack last week at the LAN. On the drive back, my car passenger was able to take my shitty laptop, connect to his phone hotspot, and he used the GeForce streaming service to play a steam game for a good 4+ hours.

    Fuck Nvidia, but the service is okay in a pinch. I will never use it, but I see the appeal for people that don’t have gaming computers.

    • TheRealKuni
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      12 days ago

      Yep. I understand it, being able to stream my physical Xbox to my phone or tablet when I’m away from home is awesome.