I've been having that focus stealing issue in Windows 10 for a while now. Eventually had to fun a tool in the background to track what was stealing focus. Ended up being Chrome for me (killed a bunch of Google extensions and that solved the issue). Suuuuuuper frustrating, but possibly not among WWE2K20's many, many...... MANY faults.
@lordloc: Google's messaging has been so, so terrible on this stuff. My understanding is this:
The service has a free tier (1080p max) and a paid tier (4k)
Games have to be purchased on the service - though they keep talking about nebulous discounts
The paid tier will come with a game a month, which you keep if you return to non paid status. They have not said anything about which games, beyond founders getting Destiny
Google really needed to simplify and amplify the messaging on Stadia. There is so much confusion around it it's unreal (and completely Google's fault).
I watched a video recently where James May unveiled the latest 2 cars he bought - a Tesla and a Hydrogen Fuel Cell car. He said that he's not sure exactly how motoring will evolve in future, but he wanted to be involved in the experiment. That's Stadia to me - the future of gaming involves streaming in some way; I don't know how, or to what extent, or even what companies will be at the fore - but I want to be a part of that experiment.
@gruxkaban: Nova Scotia, Canada. None of our providers have caps, and they are very competitive. I have 1Gbit fiber and no caps. Not bragging - I realize how rare that sort of thing is nowadays.
I can remember how terrible mobile data plans were pre-2007, and how the iPhone came along like a bomb and radically changed the industry. I don't know what needs to happen for the same paradigm shift in home internet (well, get rid of Ajit Pai, that guy sucks :), but I hope something comes along soon.
We have great, uncapped internet where I live, and I've pre-ordered the founders pack. I feel like Google has been selling this wrong, or reviewers are looking at it wrong, or both. It's not a console launch, it's more like putting your video card in the cloud. If this works well, why would I spend $1,000 on a new video card when I can just pay $10 a month for 4K 60FPS with HDR?
I totally get that it isn't for everyone, especially with internet infrastructure being so terrible in some places. I would hope at some point that all these streaming services, etc would be pushing internet providers to offer a better service.
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