Bad comparison. This is buying a new piece of hardware to stream data and requires you to rejigger your PC to be compatible. The Wii U is a fully integrated experience and is designed to promote a synergy between the main TV and the tablet controller.isiolia wrote:Yet the same ability on a Wii U is praised constantly.That sounds like way too much of a pain. I guess this handheld could be good for the homebrew scene. Though I can't see it being popular with the general audience.![]()
NVidia moves into the handheld market?
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
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Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
in fairness, I think this looks just as stupid as the Wii-U.isiolia wrote: Yet the same ability on a Wii U is praised constantly.![]()
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
No, this is using a capability that could and should be there already, as an additional function of two devices that each do something else.MrPopo wrote:Bad comparison. This is buying a new piece of hardware to stream data and requires you to rejigger your PC to be compatible. The Wii U is a fully integrated experience and is designed to promote a synergy between the main TV and the tablet controller.isiolia wrote:Yet the same ability on a Wii U is praised constantly.That sounds like way too much of a pain. I guess this handheld could be good for the homebrew scene. Though I can't see it being popular with the general audience.![]()
My point about it was that you have plenty of people praising the ability of the Wii U to stream games to the Gamepad in another room. Seems like it should be just as appealing with another device.
It could be the only reason someone buys one, but, if game streaming is their primary interest it trounces the Wii U soundly. To use myself as an example...I have zero Wii U games, or Wii U. I'd have to buy either one. Probably $400 or so, and I could play...I dunno, NSMB:U? Whatever this costs and I can play the literally hundreds of PC games I already own (from a PC that already has an nVidia card
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
I really don't think anyone is praising the Wii U for its ability to stream games to the gamepad alone. It's a nice feature on a fully integrated console, not an add-on for an existing system.
I really don't get the point of this though, why would I want to stream my PC games to a tiny screen in another room?
I really don't get the point of this though, why would I want to stream my PC games to a tiny screen in another room?
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
I am so sick of seeing all of these dime a dozen android "gaming" devices. There's no possible ability for them all to co-exist, and all they do is fracture the market. They look ridiculous, tablets with controller halfs attached, 360 controller knockoffs with screens -- for a market filled with virtual button and touchscreen swipe games. Then there's an enormous range of compatibility, depending on what cheap Chinese knockoff processor powers your device compared to whatever underwhelming processor in another tries to compete with Tegra....
Bleh. Not interested.
Bleh. Not interested.
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
Not saying that it's the only thing the Wii U has, just that I've not seen it brought up as a negative.Jrecee wrote:I really don't think anyone is praising the Wii U for its ability to stream games to the gamepad alone. It's a nice feature on a fully integrated console, not an add-on for an existing system.
I really don't get the point of this though, why would I want to stream my PC games to a tiny screen in another room?
What nVidia is showing is a stand-along Tegra 4 based Android device - something that all on its own is a more capable machine than any portable system thus far (including the Vita). Like all the other Android consoles showing up, the catch there is more about software.
The ability to stream games is an additional feature. It's actually more the home/lite version of their game streaming tech Grid.
From what they've said, the consumer version just being an around the house thing is just a starting point (probably more a question of available bandwidth than what they can do though). Even with that I think it'd appeal to some people - maybe you want to run dailies or farm in an MMO while you watch TV in another room, for example. Maybe it'll mean that two people can use the same PC, much like the Wii U advertises the feature for.
Re: NVidia moves into the handheld market?
Pretty much. After Ouya's crazy Kickstarter, everyone wants a piece. Except throwing out 50 android devices is exactly the problem and only makes things worse. The reason I won't spend any time making my games work for these devices is the same reason I won't spend the time optimizing my game for all those iphone game controllers: Not enough users. The secret is standardization, which is what Ouya provides. When every one of my potential users has the same hardware, I can design games with that in mind.irixith wrote:I am so sick of seeing all of these dime a dozen android "gaming" devices. There's no possible ability for them all to co-exist, and all they do is fracture the market. They look ridiculous, tablets with controller halfs attached, 360 controller knockoffs with screens -- for a market filled with virtual button and touchscreen swipe games. Then there's an enormous range of compatibility, depending on what cheap Chinese knockoff processor powers your device compared to whatever underwhelming processor in another tries to compete with Tegra....
Bleh. Not interested.
