Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Early tests call Google Stadia’s quality into question, and that’s a shame

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The visual quality just isn’t that good.

Google Stadia is a cloud game streaming service that promises the best visuals given its power advantage over the competition. When the service was first revealed, the company said that it featured 10.7 teraflops (tflops) of computational power compared to 6 tflops for the Xbox One X and 4.2 tflops for the PlayStation 4 Pro. Naturally, gamers assumed that this would mean that every game was going to be at 4K resolution and 60 frames per second (FPS). However, a recent analysis by Digital Foundry revealed that that wasn’t the case at all for many major titles.

Destiny 2 runs at native 4K resolution on Xbox One X, but it’s locked to 30 FPS. Since the base Xbox One version also runs at 30 FPS, the team probably didn’t want to give any players an advantage over the rest. On Stadia, Destiny 2 hits 60 FPS, but it’s locked to 1080p resolution. This is a curious decision by Bungie because hardware that has 10.7 tflops should be able to run Destiny 2 at 4K 60 FPS. Hopefully, the team will change this with a future patch.

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Red Dead Redemption 2 is another curious case. If you play it in Google Chrome on PC, the game renders at 60 FPS. Unfortunately, the image quality is locked to 1080p. Jumping to a Chromecast Ultra should give you a 4K picture, but it doesn’t. The game looks blurry and Digital Foundry found that it’s running at 1440p resolution and 30 FPS on Google Stadia’s servers. Again, it’s unclear why that’s the case given the powerful hardware.

The outlet hypothesized that it was due to developers’ unfamiliarity with the devkit and it would take some time for them to take complete advantage of it. Either way, the company shouldn’t be boasting about “up to 4K” and “60 FPS” when many games don’t even take advantage of the hardware. It seems like the team is unaware of the fact that Bungie and Rockstar Games aren’t rendering their games at 4K resolution on Stadia. It doesn’t matter what the reason it, consumers will think this is a corporation lying to them again.

Hopefully, Google will work with these developers to fix the problems. Since Stadia may be many gamers’ first introduction to cloud gaming, it’s not making a great impression. Social media is flooded with messages where customer service won’t cancel preorders, how many gamers are blurry and only a handful “look like 4K,” and much more. Google needs to tackle all of these complaints head-on because the Stadia launch looks awfully familiar to what happened with the Xbox One all those years ago. We all know how that turned out.

Everything you need

Stadia Founder’s Edition

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$129 at the Google Store

A good way to start

This bundle includes everything you need to get started with Google Stadia. It includes the controller, Chromecast Ultra, Destiny 2, and three months of the Stadia Pro subscription for you and a friend. It’s a great way to begin your game streaming journey

Pick up the parts

Chromecast Ultra

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$70 at the Amazon

HD streaming

You can buy everything together or you can get just the basics for Google Stadia. The Chromecast Ultra is available to purchase now and lets you stream 4K TV as well as play games when Stadia launches in November.

All you need

Google Stadia controller

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$70 at the Google Store

A firm grip on what’s needed

The Stadia controller is all you need to use Google Stadia if you already have the Chromecast Ultra. You can also use it on your other devices too. Get the Wasabi colored one, it’s gorgeous.

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