Hands-on With Google Stadia: Streaming Doom Eternal
Google won’t launch its Stadia streaming service until the end of the year, but here at E3 2019, I got to try it early.
The setup was non-traditional but still a possible use case. I played Doom Eternal on a Pixelbook hard-wired to the internet and connected to a TV with an HDMI cable. The Stadia controller (part of the $130 Founder’s edition or $70 on its own) connected to the Pixelbook via USB.
There was no server in the backyard of the downtown house Google rented for the demo. Everything came from a data center in San Francisco. While a representative didn't know which ISP wired the house, he said they were getting 25 Mbps , good enough for 1080p at 60 frames per second (fps) with 5.1 surround sound. That is short, however, of the maximum 4K at 60 fps when you get 35 Mbps down.
For the most part, Doom Eternal played pretty well. After a tutorial and half hour of play I was blasting enemies with a flamethrower, performing glory kills and dashing to walls I could climb reliably. Two or three times during that time period, there were slight hiccups in which I encountered lag, but other than that it was smooth sailing. Was it as exact as playing on a PC? Not exactly, but it felt pretty damn close to console play.
But that’s the question that Stadia will have to answer. For those with even the most stable internet connections, hiccups can happen. How many will gamers tolerate?
I encountered a few issues; The game itself crashed twice, which a representative from developer Bethesda present said was due to the fact that it was an early demo. I had to use the touchpad on the Pixel to relaunch the game, which led to the cursor being stuck in every gun’s reticle until I moved it offscreen. Unlike some other reporters I’ve spoken too, I was never disconnected from the game entirely due to internet issues. But the fact that others did gives me some pause.
I asked the Bethesda representative if there will be any settings options at all, but was told that the Stadia edition of Doom Eternal will perform like its console brethren with only your Internet connection changing graphics and performance.
Stay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom's Hardware Newsletter
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
One highlight is that the controller is surprisingly comfortable. It takes PlayStation 4's DualShock 4 shape and control stick layout and mixes it with Xbox’s button layout to make an ergonomic design that was comfortable for a solid period of play.
Stadia will launch in November for $10 per month or $130 for a Founder’s Edition package that includes three months of service, a Chromecast Ultra and a midnight blue controller. When that happens, we'll be able to test in our own homes. Doom Eternal will launch November 22 on Stadia, PC, Xbox One, PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch.
Andrew E. Freedman is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware focusing on laptops, desktops and gaming. He also keeps up with the latest news. A lover of all things gaming and tech, his previous work has shown up in Tom's Guide, Laptop Mag, Kotaku, PCMag and Complex, among others. Follow him on Threads @FreedmanAE and Mastodon @FreedmanAE.mastodon.social.
-
Spinachy You do not mention Latency (i.e. ping time). For example, Gamers tend to prefer e.g. higher-res mice, because that (supposedly) reduces the time between moving the mouse, and a reaction happening in the game. Presumably now the mouse movement will have to be sent up to the game server, which will then send a response down (many milliseconds, I expect). What was the ping to the Google game server ? Did that make the game feel "laggy" ?Reply -
Stay away from streaming games Until everybody in the entire world is on fiber right to their house and the backbone can handle it. Currently These will be plagued by latency issues.Reply
Game streaming also sucks because you don’t own the games And forever paying for content -
zeonos If you buy a game on Steam/Epic/Uplay/Origin and most other platforms, you wont "own" it either. if that companies closes down, you will lose your library.Reply
One of the few exceptions is gog.com, where you can download the full game and play it without any launcher or DRM. -
Soaptrail A real review will have to include how the gameplay handles others on the same connection using the internet to watch netflix or upload a picture.Reply