Oh No, Google Stadia Is Pure TRASH! - Stadia Connect Reaction
Well we finally saw all the major details of Google Stadia and it's pretty much a dumpster fire. Lets dig into this trash!
Like and subscribe if you enjoyed it!
DreamcastGuy shirts are here: https://teespring.com/stores/dreamcastguys-store
Follow me on social media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dreamcastguy
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/dreamcastguy
Instagram: http://instagram.com/dreamcastguy
Business email: Mark.shockley@yahoo.com
All clips of audio and video used in this work are used for entertainment or education purposes under the fair use clause found in sections 107 through 118 of the copyright law (title 17, U. S. Code). If you have any dispute please contact me.
"EDM Detection Mode" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
#GoogleStadiaReaction #GoogleStadia #StadiaConnect
The upcoming streaming platform Google Stadia won’t just follow the Netflix model, as many fans had hoped. It will instead have both a subscription and games for sale individually, as Kotaku previously reported. Here’s everything we learned today during Google’s “Stadia Connect” stream.
Stadia, which was announced in March, is a streaming platform designed to let you play games without a high-end console or computer. If it works as promised, it’ll let you plug a Chromecast into your television and access games through the cloud, no hardware required. The base subscription price is $10/month, with a free version planned for next year, and a Founder’s Edition bundle available for $130 this November when Stadia launches.
It’ll be a slow rollout, Google says—you won’t be able to access Stadia via browsers and phones until next year. This November, you’ll only be able to play with a Stadia controller and a Chromecast hooked up to your television. Google says you’ll need that Founder’s Edition to play in 2019—the platform won’t open up further until 2020. Some other announcements:
Google announced Baldur’s Gate 3 and Ghost Recon: Breakout for Stadia, the latter with a new trailer. (Don’t worry—the former is also coming to PC.)
Other games announced include Gylt, an adventure game from developer Tequila Works, and a multiplayer Overcooked-style game called Get Packed from Moonshine Studios.
The Division 2 will be there, too. Ubisoft overload!
Stadia Pro is the official service, at $10/month, which will give you access to the service’s games at 4K resolution/60 frames-per-second. This won’t include all the games, though—newer ones will be purchasable separately.
The controller is $70 standalone.
The Stadia Founder’s Edition will launch later this year for $130. It comes with a Chromecast Ultra, a Stadia controller, a copy of Destiny 2 (along with the new Shadowkeep expansion), and a three-month subscription along with a three-month buddy pass.
Other Stadia games include Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, Doom, Doom Eternal, the new Tomb Raider trilogy, Final Fantasy XV, Darksiders Genesis, Metro Exodus, and many others.