ESO on Stadia. What do you think?

Davor
Davor
✭✭✭✭✭
I just saw that ESO will be on Stadia. Since I am already relying on my internet now, that wouldn't make a difference since my internet will be the same no matter what, BUT not having to worry about hardware, that could increase my performance then.

Question is, would we have to start all over? Would it be like it is done with Steam? I don't know if Steam allows mixing accounts with a previous account from ESO.

So what do you think of ESO on Stadia. At least we should be getting max graphics then? No hardware limitations now.
Not my quote but I love this saying

"I would pay It for support. But since they choosed we are just numbers and not customers, i dont mind if game and zos goes to oblivion"
  • laksikus
    laksikus
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    You are relying on YOUR internet and ZOS internet and server. Are you sure putting in googles internet and server will make the game less laging?
  • Hamish999
    Hamish999
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    WTF is Stadia?
    PC-EU
    Do'Zahra - Khajiit - StamDK - AD
    Narese Telvanni - Dunmer - Petsorc - EP
    Anastasie Chastain - Breton - Magplar - DC
    Gashnakh the Lusty - Orc - Stamsorc - AD
    Stands-In-Stoopid - Argonian - Warden Tank - AD
    Talia al-Morwha - Redguard - Stamden - AD
    Makes-Fier-Wrong - Argonian - Stamblade - AD
    Busty-Argonian-Maid - Argonian - Templar Healer - AD
    Alaru Telvanni - Dunmer - Stamplar - AD
    Ko'Raehsi - Khajiit - Magsorc - AD
    Torhild Rock-Chucker - Nord - StamDK - AD
    Drusilla Larouche - Breton - MagDK - AD
    Ko'Khanni - Khajiit - Magden - AD
    Ilithyia Ectorius - Imperial - DK Tank -AD
    Rosara Laumont - Breton - Warden Healer - AD
    Do'Darri - Khajiit - Stam Arcanist - AD

    Keyboard and mouse FTW!
  • ManwithBeard9
    ManwithBeard9
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Nothing service wise would be better. You're throwing in another connection point. You'll have more option of where to play.
  • Linaleah
    Linaleah
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    you will be paying extra to acess it. I don't know if you'd have to create a new account. you... might get slightly better performance IF your rig is very outdated. if your performance is bottle necked by your internet, stadia will not help you. you'd be able to play on your phone though, in theory so there's that?
    dirty worthless casual.
    Reputation is what other people know about you. Honor is what you know about yourself. Guard your honor. Let your reputation fall where it will. And outlive the ***
    Lois McMaster Bujold "A Civil Campaign"
  • zaria
    zaria
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Nothing service wise would be better. You're throwing in another connection point. You'll have more option of where to play.
    This, it might help if you have an good Internet connection but an crap pc and will not change it as you got it from workplace and no room for an desktop setup.

    Grinding just make you go in circles.
    Asking ZoS for nerfs is as stupid as asking for close air support from the death star.
  • Wildberryjack
    Wildberryjack
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    I wonder about Stadia. My concern are delays in keystrokes to actions in the game. We'll see I guess, want to try it for sure.
    The purpose of art is washing the dust of daily life off our souls. ~Pablo Picasso
  • Fata1moose
    Fata1moose
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Data caps exist and I have a good PC without input lag so it's completely useless for me. Hope it helps the game grow a wider audience for those w/o hardware, but given its limited availability the regions where it is likely to work are high income areas that already have gaming hardware.
    Edited by Fata1moose on June 6, 2019 7:57PM
  • danno8
    danno8
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.
  • ghastley
    ghastley
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Chances are that a rig with a weak video card will also have a slow NIC. I.e. you won't have the speed to make use of it. If your ISP is throttling your bandwidth as well, it won't be a benefit.
  • Davor
    Davor
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Hamish999 wrote: »
    WTF is Stadia?

    Something like Netflix, where you pay $11.99 Canadian, a month, and you just click on the game you bought and play. No installing, no downloads, and play on your PC, laptop, TV, tablets or Google Phone. You can use any controller you want, and games are suppose to run at 60 FPS and up to 4K graphics.

    So for people with medium or less computers, consoles, you don't need to worry about hard ware no more since we are suppose to get the best graphics on highest settings since it's Google who is doing all the work.

    So for me where on high settings on my PC I get from 25-60 FPS, so maybe using Stadia we can get 60 FPS.

    It seems we can play ESO on the go now with tablets and Google Phones. (Their new ones I believe, I don't know their names)
    Not my quote but I love this saying

    "I would pay It for support. But since they choosed we are just numbers and not customers, i dont mind if game and zos goes to oblivion"
  • Linaleah
    Linaleah
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    danno8 wrote: »
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.

    honestly it depends on what we are talking about. for instance I pretty much stopped buying books lately with a very rare exception and instead - rent them at the library. why? becasue I know i won't be rereading most books so its not cost or space effective to buy them (and library is free) I also have netflix subscription, again becasue most things on it - I will only watch once. I've also rented games that I knew I wouldn't be replaying. to hit closer to real life, i have rented power tools from a local hardware store, because rend is $20 for a day, while buying something like that would cost me $300 or more and I really only needed a thing for a single project

    in the end it comes down to a simple question. are you going to keep using something or are you only using it once, maybe twice and that's that. ownership is cost effective some of the time, other times... its cheaper and easier to rent.
    dirty worthless casual.
    Reputation is what other people know about you. Honor is what you know about yourself. Guard your honor. Let your reputation fall where it will. And outlive the ***
    Lois McMaster Bujold "A Civil Campaign"
  • danno8
    danno8
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.

    honestly it depends on what we are talking about. for instance I pretty much stopped buying books lately with a very rare exception and instead - rent them at the library. why? becasue I know i won't be rereading most books so its not cost or space effective to buy them (and library is free) I also have netflix subscription, again becasue most things on it - I will only watch once. I've also rented games that I knew I wouldn't be replaying. to hit closer to real life, i have rented power tools from a local hardware store, because rend is $20 for a day, while buying something like that would cost me $300 or more and I really only needed a thing for a single project

    in the end it comes down to a simple question. are you going to keep using something or are you only using it once, maybe twice and that's that. ownership is cost effective some of the time, other times... its cheaper and easier to rent.

    Yes, pretty much.

    You will notice that in all your examples the cost to rent is extremely small, and the re usability of the item you are renting is similarly tiny.

    If Stadia were free (lol) like a library, then of course everyone would use it. Vast majority of books you read once.

    Netflix same thing. Vast majority of movies and series, you watch once.

    Power tools, once again. You only use a drain snake once every few years or so so why would you pay $1000?

    But for a video card...again it will depend on price, but the re usability of a video card is very high. If you go the Stadia route, what happens if you want to play a game that is not on the Stadia network? Now you have no card.
  • Davor
    Davor
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Stadia is free to use. You just don't get 4K settings I think up to 720p and like Xbox Live Gold you don't get free games then if you don't subscribe.
    Not my quote but I love this saying

    "I would pay It for support. But since they choosed we are just numbers and not customers, i dont mind if game and zos goes to oblivion"
  • CleymenZero
    CleymenZero
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Let's not forget add-ons. I'm too spoiled to a platform like this.

    Also, my PC is a beast that can run this game at 200+fps (I capped it at 100 though because there's no point even though I have a 240hz monitor), I have gigabit internet and the game is still a lagfest...
  • Sylvermynx
    Sylvermynx
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    No thanks. I use google for search and email. That's it. Not to mention that with even a bit better 'net now, it's still not fiber.... so nopenopenope.
  • Goregrinder
    Goregrinder
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Can you really tolerate another 200+ms of latency added to our current 150+ latency? I know I couldn't.
  • danno8
    danno8
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Davor wrote: »
    Stadia is free to use. You just don't get 4K settings I think up to 720p and like Xbox Live Gold you don't get free games then if you don't subscribe.

    It *will be* in 2020.

    One thing I am not clear on is if you have to buy a "stadia" version of the games you want to play. So if you don't keep renting the service you get cut off from your game completely. Can't find a clear answer.
  • kylewwefan
    kylewwefan
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    I have Shareplay this game before.

    I would think it be something like that but hopefully a little less lag.

    It plays just like having the game installed.
  • Kadoin
    Kadoin
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Here's what I think:

    :D
  • LordGavus
    LordGavus
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Can you really tolerate another 200+ms of latency added to our current 150+ latency? I know I couldn't.

    350 ping, we call that a good day in Australia :D

    That is my concern with stadia though. This game already suffers with lag and connection issues, stadia will add another stop.
  • Kiralyn2000
    Kiralyn2000
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Hamish999 wrote: »
    WTF is Stadia?

    Yet Another Game Streaming Service, that will blow for everyone who doesn't have godlike broadband.

    So, nothing to particularly care about.
  • Linaleah
    Linaleah
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    danno8 wrote: »
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.

    honestly it depends on what we are talking about. for instance I pretty much stopped buying books lately with a very rare exception and instead - rent them at the library. why? becasue I know i won't be rereading most books so its not cost or space effective to buy them (and library is free) I also have netflix subscription, again becasue most things on it - I will only watch once. I've also rented games that I knew I wouldn't be replaying. to hit closer to real life, i have rented power tools from a local hardware store, because rend is $20 for a day, while buying something like that would cost me $300 or more and I really only needed a thing for a single project

    in the end it comes down to a simple question. are you going to keep using something or are you only using it once, maybe twice and that's that. ownership is cost effective some of the time, other times... its cheaper and easier to rent.

    Yes, pretty much.

    You will notice that in all your examples the cost to rent is extremely small, and the re usability of the item you are renting is similarly tiny.

    If Stadia were free (lol) like a library, then of course everyone would use it. Vast majority of books you read once.

    Netflix same thing. Vast majority of movies and series, you watch once.

    Power tools, once again. You only use a drain snake once every few years or so so why would you pay $1000?

    But for a video card...again it will depend on price, but the re usability of a video card is very high. If you go the Stadia route, what happens if you want to play a game that is not on the Stadia network? Now you have no card.

    apparently Stadia is $130 for founders package that includes chromecast (which can technically be used for streaming, practically is only really useful if for whatever reason you don't have a smart TV that already comes with app and streaming capability) controller that looks... decent and 3 months of subscription. subscription is $10 a month, so its basicaly $100 for hardware.

    is it worth it? you decide. for me, stadia might be worth it for a month here and there, much like playstation now - IF it will work on my smart TV or PC without having to get extra hardware, IF it works with my preferred controller (dualshock or even better - keyboard and mouse) and IF it has several games I'm curious about but not sure if want to own. (I see about 4 on announcement list which is 1-2 month's worth of subscription's worth for me, personaly and it IS more cost effective that way than buying it)

    so to your question - what do I do if the game I want is not on Stadia? why, I don't continue with subscription, of course! same way I discontinue ps now once I was done with games i wanted to try.

    and I guess my point is, from the start. how much are you going to use something? honestly, for MMO's? its only worth it to try it, assuming those MMO's do not come with free trial option. but to continuously play with Stadia? I guess it depends. it does seem like they will let you purchase individual games and play them without having to subscribe, so could be worth it. could be.

    I still don't see how the performance is going to better than just having a game installed on your hardware EVEN if your hardware is not top of the line.
    dirty worthless casual.
    Reputation is what other people know about you. Honor is what you know about yourself. Guard your honor. Let your reputation fall where it will. And outlive the ***
    Lois McMaster Bujold "A Civil Campaign"
  • xMovingTarget
    xMovingTarget
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    You can already play steam eso on nvidias cloud gaming service. For about 1 year now. Called geforce now. Works great. But only if you stream in 120 fps. Everything lower and you notice the input lag.
  • MrGarlic
    MrGarlic
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    The devil will be in the details, of which there are scant few at the moment.

    But I do wonder if this might help latency in distant lands.
    'Sharp Arrows'Mr.Garlic
    Hidden by darkness, a shadow in the night,A sped arrow dissecting the gloom,Finding it's target, such delight.
  • danno8
    danno8
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.

    honestly it depends on what we are talking about. for instance I pretty much stopped buying books lately with a very rare exception and instead - rent them at the library. why? becasue I know i won't be rereading most books so its not cost or space effective to buy them (and library is free) I also have netflix subscription, again becasue most things on it - I will only watch once. I've also rented games that I knew I wouldn't be replaying. to hit closer to real life, i have rented power tools from a local hardware store, because rend is $20 for a day, while buying something like that would cost me $300 or more and I really only needed a thing for a single project

    in the end it comes down to a simple question. are you going to keep using something or are you only using it once, maybe twice and that's that. ownership is cost effective some of the time, other times... its cheaper and easier to rent.

    Yes, pretty much.

    You will notice that in all your examples the cost to rent is extremely small, and the re usability of the item you are renting is similarly tiny.

    If Stadia were free (lol) like a library, then of course everyone would use it. Vast majority of books you read once.

    Netflix same thing. Vast majority of movies and series, you watch once.

    Power tools, once again. You only use a drain snake once every few years or so so why would you pay $1000?

    But for a video card...again it will depend on price, but the re usability of a video card is very high. If you go the Stadia route, what happens if you want to play a game that is not on the Stadia network? Now you have no card.





    so to your question - what do I do if the game I want is not on Stadia? why, I don't continue with subscription, of course! same way I discontinue ps now once I was done with games i wanted to try.

    .

    Actually the hypothetical was not about the game, but the lack of a card.

    Assuming people forgo purchasing a quality video card with the presumption that they will simply use Stadia, if the game they want to play is not on Stadia they are kinda SoL.

    If you are going to pay Google to process your game, I assume you are not going to want to pay for an additional card of your own.
  • Linaleah
    Linaleah
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    danno8 wrote: »
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    Linaleah wrote: »
    danno8 wrote: »
    It will depend greatly on the pricing.

    My bet is that it will cost you $15-$20 per month as a service. So $180-$240 per year. It will be up to you to decide whether or not it is worth paying $600 bucks every few years is better than buying your own hardware every few years (which could be more or less depending on how powerful you like your rigs).

    The biggest benefit will be the ability to play on any device with a decent internet connection, since it will stream the video feed to you probably at Netflix like speeds (maybe 7.5 Mb/s for 1080p).

    I'm the kind of person who prefers to buy things and own them, as opposed to renting things and owning nothing, because it almost always means better value in the long run. But I know that today's generation are getting more into paying subscriptions for everything and owning nothing so maybe it will work out well. For Nvidia it will anyway.

    honestly it depends on what we are talking about. for instance I pretty much stopped buying books lately with a very rare exception and instead - rent them at the library. why? becasue I know i won't be rereading most books so its not cost or space effective to buy them (and library is free) I also have netflix subscription, again becasue most things on it - I will only watch once. I've also rented games that I knew I wouldn't be replaying. to hit closer to real life, i have rented power tools from a local hardware store, because rend is $20 for a day, while buying something like that would cost me $300 or more and I really only needed a thing for a single project

    in the end it comes down to a simple question. are you going to keep using something or are you only using it once, maybe twice and that's that. ownership is cost effective some of the time, other times... its cheaper and easier to rent.

    Yes, pretty much.

    You will notice that in all your examples the cost to rent is extremely small, and the re usability of the item you are renting is similarly tiny.

    If Stadia were free (lol) like a library, then of course everyone would use it. Vast majority of books you read once.

    Netflix same thing. Vast majority of movies and series, you watch once.

    Power tools, once again. You only use a drain snake once every few years or so so why would you pay $1000?

    But for a video card...again it will depend on price, but the re usability of a video card is very high. If you go the Stadia route, what happens if you want to play a game that is not on the Stadia network? Now you have no card.





    so to your question - what do I do if the game I want is not on Stadia? why, I don't continue with subscription, of course! same way I discontinue ps now once I was done with games i wanted to try.

    .

    Actually the hypothetical was not about the game, but the lack of a card.

    Assuming people forgo purchasing a quality video card with the presumption that they will simply use Stadia, if the game they want to play is not on Stadia they are kinda SoL.

    If you are going to pay Google to process your game, I assume you are not going to want to pay for an additional card of your own.

    ah. gotcha :) and.. yeah, basically. unless people in question play on console to begin with. or if they are like me and get Stadia subscription the same way as netflix. I still buy boxed sets (or individual disks) for movies or shows I know i'll be re-watching becasue they are that much of a fave, so...

    mostly, I'm just amused at how people are ooohing and aaahing over Stadia when services LIKE stadia have existed for a while now. unless Stadia miraculously fixes issues that existing services suffer from... its not going to fix anything for ESO players having performance issues. at ALL.
    dirty worthless casual.
    Reputation is what other people know about you. Honor is what you know about yourself. Guard your honor. Let your reputation fall where it will. And outlive the ***
    Lois McMaster Bujold "A Civil Campaign"
  • Sylvermynx
    Sylvermynx
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    MrGarlic wrote: »
    The devil will be in the details, of which there are scant few at the moment.

    But I do wonder if this might help latency in distant lands.

    I kind of doubt it. Probably load 200 ms on top of what you already have.
  • LordGavus
    LordGavus
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    MrGarlic wrote: »
    The devil will be in the details, of which there are scant few at the moment.

    But I do wonder if this might help latency in distant lands.

    I wouldnt think so.
    Currently our connection is, server - player
    With this it will be, server - stadia - player
    I dont see how adding an extra stop would improve things.

    The only way i can see it helping is if stadia somehow improves the connection to the servers (i would think if this is possible ZOS would be working on it).

    The game servers will still perform the same with or with stadia.
  • Thrawniel
    Thrawniel
    ✭✭✭
    I like the idea of it for travels. But I will wait till they release it for phones other than Pixel.

    Maybe it won't be too good for combat, but at least I could do crafting dailies and non-combat stuff. Had to miss a week of golden tickets from anniversary cake this year due to travel. Stadia would be helpful at it!
  • MrGarlic
    MrGarlic
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    LordGavus wrote: »
    MrGarlic wrote: »
    The devil will be in the details, of which there are scant few at the moment.

    But I do wonder if this might help latency in distant lands.

    I wouldnt think so.
    Currently our connection is, server - player
    With this it will be, server - stadia - player
    I dont see how adding an extra stop would improve things.

    The only way i can see it helping is if stadia somehow improves the connection to the servers (i would think if this is possible ZOS would be working on it).

    The game servers will still perform the same with or with stadia.

    Of course there's no way to tell at the moment, but I was thinking that if it uses Google's CDN globally, then it might bypass Akamai, which is Oceanic's current bottle-neck to the megaservers.

    Really depends on how it connects to the NA Megaserver once it leaves Google's infrastructure, but if it routes directly to the USA, it could see a reduction of ping for us down here.

    Hypothetically of course.

    Although the more I read on it, the more I am going to say it would be a very negative experience for my household, in my location, with my poor ADSL2 connection.

    Oh well, back to 350ms ping :(
    'Sharp Arrows'Mr.Garlic
    Hidden by darkness, a shadow in the night,A sped arrow dissecting the gloom,Finding it's target, such delight.
Sign In or Register to comment.