Google says Stadia will run on “any screen type” but it will work on desktops, laptops, TVs, tablets and phones at launch. There’s no box at all.
“With Stadia, the data center is your platform,” Google said. A gamer can start on one platform and then pick up where they left off on another devices, which means you might game on your computer and then continue on your phone when you leave the house.
People will be able to play with a keyboard and mouse or a special Stadia controller that Google will sell. It has a capture button that lets people share their games right to YouTube so that other people can watch. It also has a Google Assistant button, which gives access to the microphone for speaking to in-game features that developers will be able to build into their games.
Google said it will support 4K games at 60fps with HDR but that, in the future, will support games up to 8K resolution. Most people don’t yet own 8K TVs and only the most recent gaming consoles from Microsoft and Sony currently support 4K HDR gaming.
AMD helps Google power Stadia’s graphics rendering in the cloud.
Just watched the Keynote on Youtube. It seems they have simply done what any big company does. It takes a smaller companies ideas and uses its massive financial ability to push out the same product faster.
Gaming pc’s will soon be obsolete in the near future with all gaming being handled on the cloud. Graphic cards will become cheaper finally. Let’s see how it works once it is released worldwide.
This days almost every game has an online co-op version. Like fifa online or red dead redemption or gta online. It is much more fun especially once you beat all the missions.
True thats what left of games after you complete them … but kama umewai kuwa kwa mse ako na stima but net imepotea its really boring ju they stream everything