like this so we're gonna try out some pub G and looking at it right now playing over a wired connection the overall graphics quality is pretty spot-on you're not going to notice too much of an issue with jagged resolution anything like that the picture looks just like you would expect if you were playing on your local machine there are some instances where if your bandwidth starts to be restricted or the network becomes unreliable you're gonna see the resolution of the stream starts decrease the resolution of the game being rendered isn't being decreased but actually the stream starts to decrease its resolution just like it would if you were watching YouTube or you were watching Netflix and you started to have some bandwidth problems you know those services will decrease the resolution temporarily to try and still provide you with video even though your networks not the best same thing with GeForce now
how common is that issue is probably what you're wondering and you know it really depends on your connection right now we're wired over Ethernet we got a pretty good beefy connection going so there's not a lot of problems here we're seeing very solid resolution I'm not seeing anything in these fine details here that would suggest we are below the 2560 by 1440 resolution of this monitor
now if we were playing over Wi-Fi as we have done you know things can sometimes get a little bit dicey err and you can start to see some resolution drops and the resolution drops can get quite low geforce nail is very aggressive about trying to provide you with a consistent smooth experience so it will drop down the sun thing that looks like even 480p you know if it has to
but usually if your bandwidth does meet the recommended requirements you're not going to see that be a problem other thing you're probably wondering about is the latency and the responsiveness now that is something I can say is really spot-on pop jeez maybe not the best example for latency and responsiveness because it's kind of a janky game in general however we've tested it with other games too and we can say that it really never feels like you are playing over a network connection
it's it's actually kind of odd you could probably set most people down and they would play this and and not have any idea that it was being rendered on some server you know in California the latency is are really that good and again the the service is very aggressive about Howard not the resolution to keep things smooth so even when the bandwidth starts to get a little dicey the gameplay does a pretty good job of staying there
it's only a problem when you get to that point where the service starts to cut out which will happen if the connection is poor enough and then you will start to notice some glitches g-force now Vegas EDD is a beta service it's free to use right now if you can get in the waitlist now the way it works is that you do have to own the games you play on it
it actually kind of works like a virtual machine so if you want to play pub G then you actually login to your steam account through the virtual machine and then you load up pub G's this like you would normally on your local computer big question is what is this going to cost when it does come out and when is it going to come out
unfortunately we can't really tell you because NVIDIA hasn't said we don't know exactly what it's going to come out and video would like for that come out this year but that's not absolutely for sure and we don't know how much it will be priced at but I will say it's probably not going to be all that inexpensive
there is a competing service out there you might want to know about called the blade service it's from a company called shadow which is a startup but they have a lot of funny and apparently they're a bit of a thing in France so they're gonna be making their North American debut in February in California
"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: eneveryone knows that games look best on a PC but everyone also knows that gaming PC's are not cheap and often if you want the best experience you need to go with the gaming desktop which has the best hardware possible now what if there was another option what if you actually could play your PC games on a system like a laptop that doesn't even have a discrete graphics card at maximum resolution at maximum detail well GeForce now a streaming service is trying to do that the service which is currently in beta for PC and for Mac allows you to play your PC games on pretty much any system as long as you meet the bandwidth requirements it's a very interesting solution and we're going to take a look at it right now so we're going to play some player gnomes battlegrounds here and you can see we have all the settings to ultra and you can do this no matter what computer you're playing on as long as computer has enough bandwidth to use GeForce now and the minimum is 25 megabits per second recommended 50 megabits per second so they're not kiddin around with the bandwidth requirements but if you can make that you can play games at their maximum detail settings on anything from a high-end desktop to a low-end laptop we've also tested this system on au Asus Zenbook ux301 Amazon and it doesn't have any sort of discrete graphics it's actually a pretty poor platform for playing games but if you use you force now it'll look pretty much just like this so we're gonna try out some pub G and looking at it right now playing over a wired connection the overall graphics quality is pretty spot-on you're not going to notice too much of an issue with jagged resolution anything like that the picture looks just like you would expect if you were playing on your local machine there are some instances where if your bandwidth starts to be restricted or the network becomes unreliable you're gonna see the resolution of the stream starts decrease the resolution of the game being rendered isn't being decreased but actually the stream starts to decrease its resolution just like it would if you were watching YouTube or you were watching Netflix and you started to have some bandwidth problems you know those services will decrease the resolution temporarily to try and still provide you with video even though your networks not the best same thing with GeForce now if you start to have that issue now how common is that issue is probably what you're wondering and you know it really depends on your connection right now we're wired over Ethernet we got a pretty good beefy connection going so there's not a lot of problems here we're seeing very solid resolution I'm not seeing anything in these fine details here that would suggest we are below the 2560 by 1440 resolution of this monitor now if we were playing over Wi-Fi as we have done you know things can sometimes get a little bit dicey err and you can start to see some resolution drops and the resolution drops can get quite low geforce nail is very aggressive about trying to provide you with a consistent smooth experience so it will drop down the sun thing that looks like even 480p you know if it has to but usually if your bandwidth does meet the recommended requirements you're not going to see that be a problem other thing you're probably wondering about is the latency and the responsiveness now that is something I can say is really spot-on pop jeez maybe not the best example for latency and responsiveness because it's kind of a janky game in general however we've tested it with other games too and we can say that it really never feels like you are playing over a network connection it's it's actually kind of odd you could probably set most people down and they would play this and and not have any idea that it was being rendered on some server you know in California the latency is are really that good and again the the service is very aggressive about Howard not the resolution to keep things smooth so even when the bandwidth starts to get a little dicey the gameplay does a pretty good job of staying there it's only a problem when you get to that point where the service starts to cut out which will happen if the connection is poor enough and then you will start to notice some glitches g-force now Vegas EDD is a beta service it's free to use right now if you can get in the waitlist now the way it works is that you do have to own the games you play on it it actually kind of works like a virtual machine so if you want to play pub G then you actually login to your steam account through the virtual machine and then you load up pub G's this like you would normally on your local computer big question is what is this going to cost when it does come out and when is it going to come out unfortunately we can't really tell you because NVIDIA hasn't said we don't know exactly what it's going to come out and video would like for that come out this year but that's not absolutely for sure and we don't know how much it will be priced at but I will say it's probably not going to be all that inexpensive there is a competing service out there you might want to know about called the blade service it's from a company called shadow which is a startup but they have a lot of funny and apparently they're a bit of a thing in France so they're gonna be making their North American debut in February in California and you're looking at a month a month subscription of $50 a month for that service or $35 if you go for a one year contract now would you force now be that much money don't know like I said could be less but there probably is going to be some fee to pay that's fairly substantial for a service like this still you know the point you want to take home here is you can play a game like pub G at ultra detail settings and a high resolution on a system that does not have any kind of discrete graphics and obviously that's something that you can't normally do so if you want to play on your laptop sometimes you know or you simply don't want to have to pay for all that gaming hardware g-force now looks like it will be a pretty intriguing optioneveryone knows that games look best on a PC but everyone also knows that gaming PC's are not cheap and often if you want the best experience you need to go with the gaming desktop which has the best hardware possible now what if there was another option what if you actually could play your PC games on a system like a laptop that doesn't even have a discrete graphics card at maximum resolution at maximum detail well GeForce now a streaming service is trying to do that the service which is currently in beta for PC and for Mac allows you to play your PC games on pretty much any system as long as you meet the bandwidth requirements it's a very interesting solution and we're going to take a look at it right now so we're going to play some player gnomes battlegrounds here and you can see we have all the settings to ultra and you can do this no matter what computer you're playing on as long as computer has enough bandwidth to use GeForce now and the minimum is 25 megabits per second recommended 50 megabits per second so they're not kiddin around with the bandwidth requirements but if you can make that you can play games at their maximum detail settings on anything from a high-end desktop to a low-end laptop we've also tested this system on au Asus Zenbook ux301 Amazon and it doesn't have any sort of discrete graphics it's actually a pretty poor platform for playing games but if you use you force now it'll look pretty much just like this so we're gonna try out some pub G and looking at it right now playing over a wired connection the overall graphics quality is pretty spot-on you're not going to notice too much of an issue with jagged resolution anything like that the picture looks just like you would expect if you were playing on your local machine there are some instances where if your bandwidth starts to be restricted or the network becomes unreliable you're gonna see the resolution of the stream starts decrease the resolution of the game being rendered isn't being decreased but actually the stream starts to decrease its resolution just like it would if you were watching YouTube or you were watching Netflix and you started to have some bandwidth problems you know those services will decrease the resolution temporarily to try and still provide you with video even though your networks not the best same thing with GeForce now if you start to have that issue now how common is that issue is probably what you're wondering and you know it really depends on your connection right now we're wired over Ethernet we got a pretty good beefy connection going so there's not a lot of problems here we're seeing very solid resolution I'm not seeing anything in these fine details here that would suggest we are below the 2560 by 1440 resolution of this monitor now if we were playing over Wi-Fi as we have done you know things can sometimes get a little bit dicey err and you can start to see some resolution drops and the resolution drops can get quite low geforce nail is very aggressive about trying to provide you with a consistent smooth experience so it will drop down the sun thing that looks like even 480p you know if it has to but usually if your bandwidth does meet the recommended requirements you're not going to see that be a problem other thing you're probably wondering about is the latency and the responsiveness now that is something I can say is really spot-on pop jeez maybe not the best example for latency and responsiveness because it's kind of a janky game in general however we've tested it with other games too and we can say that it really never feels like you are playing over a network connection it's it's actually kind of odd you could probably set most people down and they would play this and and not have any idea that it was being rendered on some server you know in California the latency is are really that good and again the the service is very aggressive about Howard not the resolution to keep things smooth so even when the bandwidth starts to get a little dicey the gameplay does a pretty good job of staying there it's only a problem when you get to that point where the service starts to cut out which will happen if the connection is poor enough and then you will start to notice some glitches g-force now Vegas EDD is a beta service it's free to use right now if you can get in the waitlist now the way it works is that you do have to own the games you play on it it actually kind of works like a virtual machine so if you want to play pub G then you actually login to your steam account through the virtual machine and then you load up pub G's this like you would normally on your local computer big question is what is this going to cost when it does come out and when is it going to come out unfortunately we can't really tell you because NVIDIA hasn't said we don't know exactly what it's going to come out and video would like for that come out this year but that's not absolutely for sure and we don't know how much it will be priced at but I will say it's probably not going to be all that inexpensive there is a competing service out there you might want to know about called the blade service it's from a company called shadow which is a startup but they have a lot of funny and apparently they're a bit of a thing in France so they're gonna be making their North American debut in February in California and you're looking at a month a month subscription of $50 a month for that service or $35 if you go for a one year contract now would you force now be that much money don't know like I said could be less but there probably is going to be some fee to pay that's fairly substantial for a service like this still you know the point you want to take home here is you can play a game like pub G at ultra detail settings and a high resolution on a system that does not have any kind of discrete graphics and obviously that's something that you can't normally do so if you want to play on your laptop sometimes you know or you simply don't want to have to pay for all that gaming hardware g-force now looks like it will be a pretty intriguing option\n"