• thesohoriots@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Someone help me understand the concept of this service here: is it that you buy a game on whatever store, then pay another service (GeForce Now) to effectively rent hardware that’s better than yours to play it on, but it has to stream back to your device in a cloud service format?

    • wccrawford@discuss.online
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      1 day ago

      Yes, you’re effectively renting a powerful computer.

      Previously, you could just use it without limits, and the math worked out for everyone. It’s something like 3-6 years of service to cover the cost of a decent-to-great computer.

      Now, if you’re a hardcore gamer and go over 100 hours a month, that value changes, and the break-even point is sooner. If you play for 40 hours a week, that time is effectively halved.

      At the current rates, it continues to seem like a really good value, so long as you aren’t bothered by the slight input lag or the video compression.

      But if more people use the service for more time, they’re going to have to charge more money. Either higher base rates, or lower limits. And it’s eventually going to show that it doesn’t really make sense for anyone except as a temporary measure, and then the service will disappear because it didn’t work well enough.

      • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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        15 hours ago

        This is where I’m confused.

        You have to be both a hardcore gamer AND wealthy enough to buy the brand new AAA game that needs expensive hardware, and yet be poor enough to not be able to afford a gaming rig that can handle it? But also have the funds to pay a service?

        Like, imagine buying a wagyu beef but only owning a microwave? So you rent a kitchen?

        • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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          5 hours ago

          The upside of this is that your games aren’t locked to the streaming platform. When you get yourself a PC you stop paying for Nvidia’s service, log into your Steam account and enjoy your games locally.

      • Earthman_Jim@lemmy.zip
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        16 hours ago

        Lag and compression make it a no go for the majority of pc enthusiasts. Imo this is most viable as a console alternative for kids.

    • ThisSeriesIsFalse@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      As others have said, yeah, essentially. It was very useful when my graphics card died in the middle of the stupid crypto boom that had graphics cards costing waaaay too much, let me play my games without having a computer that could ordinarily run them. Also the fact that it’s usable on mobile was very nice. Shame about what it’s become, but alas, everything goes to shit as long as it’s for profit.

    • gustofwind@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I tried it when it came out and I had access to my steam library on their digital computer. But not every steam game, only the ones that nvidia had permission to run on GeForce now

      I assume you can access more than just your steam library but yes, you’re paying to stream a game you already own from a top tier nvidia computer over the internet

    • Blizzard@lemmy.zipOP
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      1 day ago

      I think I have some kind of tier of this service because I own Shield Pro but I have never used it. I’m happy with my PS5 Pro and games running locally instead of being streamed to me.

  • Romkslrqusz@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    That’s about 3 hours 15 minutes per day or 25 hours a week.

    I’m sure this will eventually reach a point of actually enshittification. For the time being, it seems like they’re making the highest bandwidth users - who have a part time job’s amount of time to play video games - pay more for their share.

    • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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      15 hours ago

      Damn this isn’t that bad. I thought I gamed heavily but I’m probably doing 10-15 hours of week at most because work, life, kids.