Home game streaming can serve as an alternative to a dedicated gaming rig, but it depends on your needs and setup.
Home game streaming can serve as an alternative to a dedicated gaming rig, but it depends on your needs and setup.
Hello! I'm curious about your setup with Steam In-Home Streaming and NVIDIA GameStream. Can you share what latency you'd experience when streaming a game like League of Legends over a gigabit Ethernet connection? Also, would the trade-off be worthwhile if it meant using an upgraded rig for two players and selling the older one? Your example setup includes a high-end gaming PC upgraded to a used 10-core CPU, 16GB RAM, and storage, with two virtual machines running different GPU configurations. What do you think about the performance impact of this change?
You're wondering how multiple players can run several devices on one machine without issues. It's possible through proper setup and resource management. Think about using virtualization or dedicated partitions to handle different tasks at once. Also, consider the hardware limits and ensure the system can support the load.
Hey, I need to clarify how this works. It's not for streaming on Twitch—it's meant for local playback via hardware encoding from your GPU, connecting to a home theater PC across the room. You want to know if the latency difference matters and whether it’s worth the trade-off.