- cross-posted to:
- games@sh.itjust.works
- cross-posted to:
- games@sh.itjust.works
Using your phone as a controller for your TV sounds extremely stupid.
Honestly it depends on the game. If it’s a purely mouse-controlled game like a point&click, why not use the phone as a trackpad so you can game on the far larger screen?
Sure it’s a bit silly, but even if we have controllers around the home few of us have trackpads like a Steam Controller, nevermind a whole lapboard.
It would also work fine for 2D platformers
I still disagree. If you have to constantly look away from the screen to look at your controller, the experience is suboptimal.
Mobile gaming is usually organized so that you don’t have to look closely at the spot you’re touching; for instance, movement would involve pressing on any spot left of the middle of the screen, then dragging forward.
If they get even more space because players are usually looking away from that controller screen, there’s a few more options at work. I’ve played a few very well-made phone games, usually the issue is just that they’re gacha junk.
Yeah, but for mobile games you look at your phone while pressing the buttons shown in the same place.
In this case you play looking at your tv, while pressing button in your phone, which will be horrible because you can’t feel where’s each button without looking away from tv
This is not the case, though. This article is about the phone serving as a controller for the TV.
trackpad
So does playing games on Netflix.
Why would it be bad? Its just cloud streaming.
I mean yeah if you’re playing the witcher, but if they are games like Jackbox style then it makes complete sense.
Granted Netflix has burned me too many times so I won’t be resubscribing for this.
They looked at Stadia and thought:
“How can we make this worse?”
deleted by creator
Netflix thinks it’s still relevant lol
I do find it interesting how far ahead of its time the GameCube controller is though. It was almost a precursor for mobile button layout with the large A and other buttons around it in a non-traditional form/layout. That’s what immediately came to mind when seeing the controller layouts.
I’m not a huge fan of cloud gaming but Netflix may be on to something here by having games be added value to a sub rather than a discrete service with a separate sub. Plus from my experience, it’s not like the apps are streamed to your device but are available for download with an active sub.