As we have seen that this winter Samsung and LG have been exploring cloud gaming with the support for Google Stadia and Nvidia GeForce Now into their TV sets, but if there is no such brand of TV that will contain Nvidia’s best quality streams currently.
After this, the cloud gaming boss of NVIDIA, Phil Eisler has been declared to the Verge that TVs will begin at 1080p, and it is assumed that the company’s 4K HDR streams will exclusively stay to the company’s own Nvidia Shield TV set-top along with the first of 2022.
Nvidia’s GeForce to limit 1080p
It may change but this decision will be depending on your TV’s processor. Eisler says, “ The TVs use many different SOCs with different performance levels capable of decoding our streams at 60FPS, so we are focused on 1080p first” he also adds, ” We have rolled that out with LG first in December and with Samsung models in the first half of 2022, and will increase resolutions in the second half of 2022 as we continue to optimize for those decoding applications.”
Yesterday, Google just confirmed that their own Stadia cloud gaming service will offer the 4K streams on both LG and Samsung TVs (Samsung had not previously made that clear), though it is maybe good to note that the definition of Stadia of 4K has been a little bit suspect ever since the service has been launched. It also provides the refers for the resolution of Stadia’s stream itself rather than the internal rendering resolution of the games. It is reported that the 4K version of Destiny 2 on Stadia has not been sampled 1080p, for example.
A big thanks for the source.
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