So Nvidia has a new gaming handheld on the way, powered by its latest mobile chip and capable of playing Android games and streaming PC games directly from your computer.
https://lastchance.cc/nvidia-out-of-nowhere-announces-a-new-gaming-handheld-5973641%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Should we be excited? Worried? Should we even care? Letās find out.
What is Project Shield?
Project Shield is a cool code name, chosen because of the shield-like shape of the plastic on the back of its 5-inch, 1280Ć720 HD 294 dpi retinal multitouch display. That display attaches to a console-style controller, and is used to display the Android games and apps, multimedia content and streaming PC games that the device will run. An HDMI-out port allows the unit to display games and videos on any standard HD television or monitor.
Itās fair to call it an Android tablet with a small screen and a controller attached, though with the Tegra 4 chip and some killer audio design itāll be more powerful and sound better than any other Android device on the market.
Why Project Shield?
Iāll let Nvidia co-founder and CEO Jen-Hsun Huag field this one, via the official press release.
āProject Shield was created by Nvidia engineers who love to game and imagined a new way to play. We were inspired by a vision that the rise of mobile and cloud technologies will free us from our boxes, letting us game anywhere, on any screen. We imagined a device that would do for games what the iPod and Kindle have done for music and books, letting us play in a cool new way. We hope other gamers love Shield as much as we do.ā
In actuality the device doesnāt quite do for games what the iPod and Kindle have done for music and books. Android games are still downloaded directly to the Shield, and PC games must be running on a local system powered by an Nvidia graphics card. Still, I can see how they got here.
Is the Shield a Threat to Game Consoles?
Not any more than the PC is a threat to the Xbox 360, Wii U or PlayStation 3. Android gaming hasnāt exactly made a huge dent in console sales, and the ability to stream PC games still requires a gaming PC to stream from. Itās a PC accessory, rather than a PC game system.
Is the Shield a Threat to Dedicated Gaming Portables?
Not at all. Nintendoās portables have always been driven by software rather than hardware, and I donāt see anyone passing up a 3DS in order to sample what Google Play has to offer. The PC streaming is an attractive feature, but I donāt need an Nvidia-powered gaming PC to play Mario.
As for the PlayStation Vita, its biggest threat is itself.
Is the Shield a Threat to the Ouya?
If thereās one piece of technology that should be worried about Project Shield, itās the Ouya Android console. The Shield will do most everything the Ouya does, features a version of the Tegra chip thatās six times more powerful than the Ouyaās, and will stream PC games on top of that.
However, the Ouya has several things going for it, most notably the fact that through its Kickstarter campaign itās already sold plenty of units. Developers have promised Ouya-exclusive titles, which ups the consoleās value. The Ouya is completely moddableāthe Shield could be modded as well, but it seems like an awful lot of trouble. And then thereās the costāweāve no price on the Shield yet, but thereās no way itās going on the market for anywhere near the Ouyaās $99 price tag.
Project Shield Pros and Cons
Android Gaming
The main reason anyone that doesnāt use an Nvidia video card in their PC would use it for is playing the latest and greatest Android games, like Dead Trigger 2, pictured above. Backed by the power of Tegra 4āthe Shield will be the first device to utilize the system-on-a-chipāit should perform this task better than any other piece of Android gaming hardware out there, at least until the chips go wide.
Pros: Tegra 3-powered devices currently enjoy a stable of exclusive games that harness the chipās power and provide graphics and performance superior to standard Android devices. The Tegra 4 is six times as powerful as the 3, which could lead to even better exclusive titles, a boon to both Nvidia and Shield gamers. Every exclusive game for the Shield lessens the downside of this being an Android device, which isā¦
Cons: There are hundreds of devices that play Android games. Most of them come with their own screens. Most of them will hook up to the television to output video. Most of them will let you play games on the go. The Shield is optimized for gaming, which is a plus, but until those Tegra 4 exclusive games start rolling out thereās not a lot to recommend the Shield over other devices.
PC Gaming
Harnessing the technology that powers Nvidiaās newly-announced Grid, gamers will be able to stream games hosted on their gaming PC via the Shield. Last nightās demonstration showed off Assassinās Creed III and Need for Speed: Most Wanted, two games that would never run natively on a Tegra chip, flawlessly streamed in real-time to the handheld, and then fed to a television via HDMI. Coupled with Steamās Big Picture mode, focused on games that are control pad friendly, the Shield will have access to a rather impressive library of top PC titles.
https://lastchance.cc/nvidia-just-built-its-own-gaming-supercomputer-the-gri-5973751%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Cons: First of all, this is technology Iāve not had a chance to play with yet, so for all I know it could actually be sorcery. Can I stream from my PC only via my home network, or can I access it remotely from a wireless connection? If I am in my house, I am more likely to sit down at my PC anyway. If I can use this at Starbucks, thatās a different story.
The technology is nifty, but thereās no indication that it will be exclusive to the Shield. In demoing the Grid last night, Nvidia showed a game being streamed to an Asus Transformer tablet. They talked about any device being able to handle the process. If any device can handle that process, surely it can handle the same PC streaming the Shield can, knocking off another selling point.
And finally, the streaming is Nvidia tech, so if youāre not running a GeForce GTX card, donāt expect your PC to play nice.
The Controller
What makes the Shield different from most other portable Android devices is the game controller base. Itās got āconsole-qualityā (Nvidiaās words) controls. That means dual analogs, four face buttons, shoulder and trigger buttons and a directional pad. It seems solid enough.
Pros: The familiar form factor of the Shield controller (itās only slightly larger than an Xbox 360 controller) means PC players used to plugging in a pad to play will feel right at home. Itās also a boon for Android games that support gamepads.
Cons: Android developers arenāt exactly rushing to hop on the controller bandwagon. Even the most popular third-party Android controller solutions only support a relative handful of games.
It remains to be seen how the controller will handle PC games that require keyboard input. Assuming it features Bluetooth, players will be able to connect a keyboard and mouse to the unit. I know PC gamers that would rather die than have to connect their traditional controls through a console-style gamepad.
TV Connectivity
The Shield connects to your television via HDMI, projecting your games and media onto a big screen to delight and astound passersby.
Pros: Controller plus television equals game console, right? Itās like the Ouya, only more powerful and with the ability to stream PC games.
Cons: Almost every other Android device does the same thing. That, and without an expensive wireless HDMI adapter, the controller is tethered to the television with a cable, and a good quality HDMI cable isnāt nearly as yielding as your standard controller cable.
That, and I sure hope thereās an option to turn off the built-in display while running video to the television.
Sound
My favorite feature of the Shield. I own a half-dozen mobile gaming devices, and the one thing they all have in common is crappy audio. The Shield features a unique bass reflex, tuned port audio system that delivers twice the low-frequency output of a high end gaming laptop. It should sound simply divine.
Pros: Itās almost all pros here, baby. Audio has never been a priority for mobile devicesāthatās why the best games suggest you plug in headphones, and why accessory makers sell Bluetooth speakers. Iāve not heard the Shield in person, but Iām willing to believe based on dramatic rendering alone.
Cons: Games with bad audio will sound even worse.
Whoās Going to Buy the Shield?
Aside from everyone in the Nvidia Twitch.TV chat room last night? Gadget freaks, certainly. PC gamers with Nvidia cards and extra money laying around? Iāll probably pick one upāyou know, for work.
Honestly I think Nvidia has its work cut out for it with Project Shield. Itās a gorgeous little device, but what it does is a combination of something hundreds of other devices already doāAndroid gamingāand one thing that Iām not sure thereās a big call forāstreaming PC games to a portable device. Iād be more impressed if, like Razerās Switchblade prototype from January 2011 or Panasonicās aborted Jungle MMO handheld, the Shield ran PC games natively. As it stands I am curious, but not convinced.
https://gizmodo.com/razer-switchblade-pocket-gaming-pc-flip-open-customiz-5727129
So how do you feel about Project Shield now? Worried? Curious? Excited? Moments like these are why comment sections where made, ladies and gentlemen.