The PlayStation 4âs Remote Play functionality might be one of the systemâs coolest features, at least in theory: the idea of being able to switch between the big screen and the Vita for just about any game is undeniably appealing to a ton of peopleâespecially the ones who share their televisions with loved ones or other nuisances.
The good news is this: when Remote Play works, it works well. You can play tons of PS4 games on your Vita smoothly and without interruption, and they look pretty damn good on the Vitaâs small screen.
The bad news is that after extensive testing over the past two days, Iâve found that, in its current state, Remote Play is inconsistent. It wonât work at all on our office Internet, itâs laggy and choppy on Stephenâs slow Brooklyn connection, and even on my home network, which is rather fast, I canât move very far from my television without losing connection.
Letâs start with the good: sitting in my living room, six or seven feet away from my television, I was able to play through games like Assassinâs Creed IV and Battlefield 4 on my Vita without an issue. The Vita will mirror whatever is on the screen, and players can use the Vita as either their main screen, their controller, or both.
Hereâs what it looks like in my apartment:
Sometimes, during my tests, there was a slight delay between what was on the television and what was on the Vita, but it wasnât significant. Fractions of seconds. For a game like Madden, though, that could be annoyingâtry to imagine hearing announcers talking on your TV and then on your Vita just a tiny bit later, and youâll get what Iâm saying. (Muting one machine solves that problem pretty easily.)
Another small annoyance: since the Vita doesnât have two back triggers, different games use different button configurations to account for that. Some of those configurations require the back touchpad of the Vita, which is very easy to accidentally bump and touch. (Especially if youâre not wearing pants, and you decide to rest the Vita on your knee like you might with a controller.)
Those niggles aside, games ran smoothly for meâat least within a short radius. When testing the system in different parts of my apartment, I found that games would occasionally lag at the 15-20-feet range, and shut off entirely after 20 feet or so. Hereâs what happened when I tried to take a Madden session from my living room to my bathroom, about 25 feet away from my PS4.
Next-gen pixels! (A few seconds later, it disconnected.)
In case youâre wondering, my home connection speed, according to the PS4âs connection test, downloads at 15.1 megabits per second and uploads at 1.0 megabits per second.
In the office, we couldnât get Remote Play working at all, but you might chalk that up to Internet issues involving our office firewall: weâre still looking into what happened there.
Sony recommends that you keep your Vita and PS4 on the same WiFi network for optimal use, but just for kicks, I also tested with other Kotaku staffers to see if we could get this thing working with different WiFi networks. Could Patricia use her Vita from San Francisco to control my PS4 in NYC? Nope. Could I use my Vita from uptown Manhattan to control Evanâs PS4 downtown? Nope. Other permutations were equally unsuccessful.
So hereâs the verdict: right out of the box, Remote Play works well if you want to sit in the living room, playing PS4 games on a portable screen. Try to move much further, though, and you might have problems. At least for now.