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VPNs for ad-blocking After all, unlike streaming from something like Netflix, player input has to be sent to the server that’s running the game you’re playing, then that input has to be accepted and relayed back to you as quickly as possible so you don’t notice it. It’s even more important because you’re likely looking at a small tablet screen or an even smaller Android smartphone screen. While latency can never be fully eliminated, it can be mitigated on dedicated gaming devices to the point that it’s negligible. The same cannot be said for cloud gaming, which has a lot of variables that aren’t always easy to control. At home, you can stay in the same spot and use the 5GHz frequency of a compatible router or modem-router. Move too far away from your router, though, and you’re dealing with a 2.4GHz signal, which isn’t ideal. While out and about, 5G mobile internet is the gold standard for cloud gaming, but it’s not available everywhere. In fairness, my 4G tests of xCloud reaped admirable results in terms of streaming fidelity and responsiveness (there was an ever-so-slight input delay but it was still very playable). Still, how well it will work when on public transport and shifting signal strengths is yet to be seen. A momentary drop in visual quality is understandable and even preferable, but a loss of responsiveness or the introduction of changing input delays can completely throw your timing and potentially ruin your game experience. This is a lot easier to control at home, and easier still when playing on a tablet with a case that allows you to prop up your screen. Most of my xCloud testing was done with an Xbox One S wireless controller, which has Bluetooth support. It’s a great controller, but it’s not one I’d want to carry around to play games while I’m out and about. It’s definitely easier to see what you’re doing on a tablet compared to a smartphone. For my tests, I alternated between a Samsung Galaxy S9+ and a Samsung Galaxy Tab S4. Playing on my tablet via 5GHz WiFi, the battery was draining at about 10 percent per hour of play, but it was about 28 percent per hour of play on my smartphone via 4G (20ms latency with 50.3/6.82Mbps download/upload speeds on two-bar signal). Yes, it’s an older smartphone, but that’s a lot of juice to be losing per hour of play. In terms of data usage, Telstra estimates (via Kotaku) that xCloud uses between 2.5GB and 3.5GB every hour, which means you’re going to want a phone plan with plenty of data if xCloud is something you plan on using regularly with mobile data. The millisecond music skips are the cue that something ain’t right, but there’s also a feeling that you have to anticipate steering rather than react to what the road is doing. And Gears 5 has what amounts to an inbuilt latency tester care of the active-reload system. For those unaware, the Gears games have a tradition of letting you press the reload button once for a regular reload, but then you can tap reload again for an active reload. With perfect timing, you get extra bullet damage. With imperfect timing, you get a faster reload. With botched timing, your gun jams and the reload takes even longer. It’s a fantastic risk/reward gameplay system, but also one that’s sensitive to input delays. You absolutely need to anticipate an active reload when playing Gears 5 via xCloud, which will mess with your muscle memory if you’re shifting from console or PC to xCloud. And while that’s frustrating for an example like Gears 5, it also helps to underscore the true potential of xCloud: playing the games you love on a variety of platforms. As long as you’re signed into the same Xbox account and have an Xbox Game Pass Ultimate subscription, you can feasibly start playing a game on Windows 10 PC, continue on an Xbox Series X connected to your main 4K TV, pick up where you left off on an Xbox One connected to another screen in a bedroom or spare room, then keep going via xCloud when you’re out and about on an Android device. While xCloud isn’t yet particularly viable for competitive multiplayer, the prospect of being able to play across a wider range of platforms is definitely appealing. Sticking to games you’re already playing also means you ditch the obligatory initial game cutscenes (which are sometimes frustratingly unskippable), and the main waiting time then is the 30-odd seconds it takes for xCloud to load the game. It’s reportedly streaming at a fixed 30 frames per second and 720p resolution on Xbox One S hardware, but that will likely change as Microsoft upgrades to Xbox Series X streaming hardware in 2021. Higher frame rates should make it feel even more responsive while a resolution bump will help (at least a bit) with visibility in darker areas. Still, xCloud is designed to get you up and gaming in a tap and a few button presses, and it achieves that admirably. Overall brightness is a concern, as default settings (even adaptive ones) can leave you struggling to see details in shadows on a smaller screen – and turning up the brightness means a bigger battery drain – but xCloud in preview form has shown its potential as a complementary gaming companion. Assuming Microsoft’s purchase of Bethesda is approved, the prospect of uniting Bethesda’s low-latency Orion middleware with xCloud should lead to even lower-latency gaming that uses even less bandwidth. If anything, xCloud has shown that cloud gaming can absolutely work in Australia (at least in places close to Microsoft’s cloud server infrastructure).

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