Testing Nvidia’s GeForce Now RTX 4080, the most advanced cloud gaming platform yet

[ad_1]

Google Stadia shut down overnight, but it’s hardly the end of cloud gaming. Nvidia’s GeForce Now streaming service already leapfrogged Stadia and many other rivals with its RTX 3080 tier, and now, it’s delivering an upgrade to RTX 4080 graphics alongside HDR and ultrawide resolution support.

That means all the usual performance upgrades you’d expect to find with a modern GPU you’d purchase for a PC and an important advancement for latency: 240fps. While the old RTX 3080 tier could output at 120fps, doubling the frame rate is noticeable both in terms of performance and latency. It makes GeForce Now the most advanced cloud gaming platform yet and even close to feeling like you’re running games on your own PC.

I’ve been testing this new GeForce Now Ultimate competitive 240Hz mode on a 32-inch Samsung Odyssey G7 (1440p, 240Hz) monitor, and my colleague Sean Hollister has been testing on a similar 240Hz monitor. You’ll need a 240Hz display like this to really take advantage of the new mode, but you’ll still get some of the latency benefits even on 120Hz and 144Hz panels thanks to Nvidia’s Reflex technology that evaluates and decreases system latency in games.

Fortnite running at 240Hz on Nvidia’s new RTX 4080 servers.

Fortnite running at 240Hz on Nvidia’s new RTX 4080 servers.
Image: Tom Warren / The Verge

New 240Hz competitive mode

I’ve been a critic of Stadia’s lagginess for mouse and keyboard, but GeForce Now Ultimate delivers the kind of latency improvements that almost trick my mind into thinking I’m playing the game on my own gaming PC.

I mostly play shooters like Destiny 2, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, and Apex Legends, and I’ve found they’re the biggest test point for cloud gaming latency. I’ve been playing Apex Legends, CS:GO, and Fortnite on Nvidia’s RTX 4080 servers over the past week. The 240Hz mode only works at 1080p right now, and it only delivers up to 240fps in supported games. The list of games that support the 240Hz mode isn’t very long:

  • Apex Legends
  • Counter-Strike: Global Offensive
  • Fortnite
  • Rocket League
  • Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege
  • Warframe 

Nvidia says it’s planning to add more games over time and that it can even add Reflex and the ability to support its 240Hz mode in games that developers haven’t implemented it in.

That said, Fortnite was the most impressive of the bunch of 240Hz games I tested, particularly because it supports all of Nvidia’s ray-tracing options, DLSS, and the Reflex latency improvements. The game also lends itself well to streaming thanks to its cartoon-like art style. The latency improvements are huge for keyboard and mouse players, and I found it difficult to notice any lag most of the time.

It didn’t run at 240fps reliably, though. In the creative mode, it was buttery smooth, but it was easy to notice the frame rate drops when you jump out of the battle bus and glide into the battle royale mode. Once I was on the ground, I rarely saw frame rate drops, and the input latency felt super impressive most of the time.

CS:GO is mostly locked to 240fps on GeForce Now Ultimate.

CS:GO is mostly locked to 240fps on GeForce Now Ultimate.
GIF: Tom Warren / The Verge

In Apex Legends, the latency can be more noticeable during a lot of action where you have to make quick decisions, but it still feels more impressive than when I tested the RTX 3080 tier servers more than a year ago. And in CS:GO, it was a lock at 240fps most of the time and felt super smooth.

Nvidia’s RTX 4080 servers include 64 teraflops of performance (around five times an Xbox Series X), full ray tracing, and DLSS 3. The competitive 240Hz mode can deliver end-to-end latency of less than 40ms in some games, which beats playing an Xbox Series X at 60Hz.

I could tab between a Fortnite session running on my own PC with an RTX 4090 and one in this RTX 4080 cloud world, and the only noticeable difference was the quality of what I could see on-screen. I’ll let my colleague Sean Hollister explain the visual differences.

Visual quality

Hey, I’m Sean. You may remember me from such previous cloud gaming stories as why GeForce Now just kicked Google Stadia’s butt. I totally agree with Tom that the latency is superb; I’m genuinely not sure I can tell the difference in responsiveness between GeForce Now and a desktop gaming PC anymore. I definitely appreciate nearly 30 percent performance gains in my Cyberpunk 2077, too.

I just wish Nvidia had made as large a leap in image quality — because there’s one dead giveaway that lets me spot a cloud game every time. Tom and I are calling it “the haze” because that’s how it manifests in GeForce Now. It feels like there’s a haze between you and what you’re looking at, almost every time you move.

Let’s illustrate: here are two cropped screenshots of CS:GO at 1080p and 240fps. In the first, I’m standing still. In the second, I’ve begun moving, like I will be doing constantly in most games. Blow up these images, zoom in, and peep the wall textures: very different, no?

At 1080p and 240fps, moving an inch can feel like switching to potato graphics.

If you want to get more technical, this is image compression artifacting, and it’s not unique to GeForce Now — every cloud gaming service suffers from it because all of them need to shrink their images small enough so that they can send 60, 120, or even 240 of them per second across your internet connection, all while nigh-instantly reacting to your movements.

In some games, like Fortnite, the haze is simply not as noticeable. I suspect it’s because Fortnite’s a very colorful game; grays and blacks are often where you see compression artifacting at its worst. But it’s also particularly bad at 1080p resolution, the only resolution you can use for GeForce Now’s new 240fps mode. Thankfully, there are ways to reduce the haze.

Playing at 4K resolution reduces it dramatically — even if you don’t have a 4K screen. Here are two more full-size images of CS:GO streaming at 4K to a 1080p monitor. Cropped, you can see it’s not perfect, but it’s quite a bit better, and I think it’s wonderful that GeForce Now lets you choose.

Left: standing still. Right: moving.

Unfortunately, 4K isn’t available on all GeForce Now clients yet. You can’t get it on the web, which means you can’t get it on Chromebooks or the Steam Deck. You’ll need a Mac, Windows PC, Nvidia Shield TV, or certain recent smart TV sets. But I’m happy it’s an option on PC at all — Nvidia didn’t add that until last May, and it’s my favorite way to stream games now. It’s definitely a jump from the old 1440p streaming, as you can see in my Control comparison images below.

Click here to blow this up for closer inspection.
Click here to blow this up for closer inspection.
Image: Sean Hollister / The Verge

At 4K 120, even the darkest jungle regions in Shadow of the Tomb Raider, which looked almost unintelligible the last time I wrote about GeForce Now, are reasonably clear now. I could see myself playing the whole game that way.

Things to consider with game streaming

Tom here again, and it’s time to talk about the biggest drawbacks to Nvidia’s GeForce Now service: game availability, pricing, and internet connectivity. Nvidia supports Steam and the Epic Games Store, but many games still aren’t available. Publishers like Bethesda and Activision Blizzard pulled their games from GeForce Now, meaning none of the Fallout, The Elder Scrolls, Doom, and Call of Duty titles are available. That’s a huge drawback for GeForce Now Ultimate, even if it’s the most impressive cloud gaming platform so far.

Pricing is also a block to experiencing whether GeForce Now Ultimate is for you. Google let you easily test Stadia out free of charge (with a brief 4K test period), but there’s no way to try out Nvidia’s best RTX 4080 experience without signing up for the $19.99 monthly subscription. That’s disappointing because I think a lot of people will be impressed with this new 240Hz mode or even running games at 120fps in 1440p or 4K resolution.

I suspect a lot of people will balk at $19.99 per month for game streaming, but I think there’s a lot of value here. If you built an equivalent PC, then you’re looking at $2,000 or more and then the energy costs for playing. A $2,000 PC over five years works out to around $33 a month, with electricity charges on top. It’s certainly an enticing prospect if you’re thinking about upgrading your PC, especially when any games you purchase through Steam or the Epic Games Store on GeForce Now will always be yours regardless of whether you subscribe.

GeForce Now Ultimate won’t convince the most competitive and hardcore PC gamers to switch, but that’s not really the point of it. For everyone else, this feels like a compelling option if your games are there and you’re temporarily without a gaming PC or you don’t want to shell out thousands of dollars right now to upgrade.

Nvidia is launching its new RTX 4080 servers just as Google shuts down Stadia.

Nvidia is launching its new RTX 4080 servers just as Google shuts down Stadia.
Image: Tom Warren / The Verge

There’s also the matter of connectivity and data usage to consider.

You’ll need to be close to Nvidia’s servers and hope that they’ve been upgraded. Ultimate subscribers in and around San Jose, Los Angeles, Dallas, and Frankfurt, Germany, will be the first to get the RTX 4080 tier, with upgrades happening weekly.

This new competitive mode will also eat up around 13GB of data an hour, so if you have an internet connection with data caps, then this probably isn’t the service for you. I tested GeForce Now Ultimate using a 1Gbps fiber connection with less than 5ms of latency to Nvidia’s EU West servers. It’s the perfect connection for game streaming, but a lot of people won’t have such luck with connectivity, so your mileage may well vary.

[ad_2]

Source link