![]() Xbox users who are based in the United States, United Kingdom, and Korea will get a chance to test the xCloud service before it goes live to the public. There aren’t a lot of details either platform feature other than the ability to take your games on the go, but they recently announced that they will be releasing Project xCloud (Preview) out for public testing starting in October. Project xCloud (Preview) Available to the Public Soon Basically you can plug your phone into a Bluetooth Xbox controller and stream your game over Wi-Fi or through your mobile network. In March they released a video on Inside Xbox that showed a little gameplay of Project xCloud (Preview) and it looks pretty cool. Players can quickly stream curated Xbox titles such as Gears 5 and Sea of Thieves - no downloads required. Project xCloud (Preview) streams games directly from the cloud to a player’s mobile device and does not require an Xbox console.Players using Xbox Console Streaming (Preview) can stream Xbox One games installed on their console to their mobile device. Xbox Console Streaming (Preview) requires an Xbox One console with games installed, either owned games or Xbox Game Pass titles for Xbox Game Pass members.They will actually have 2 different streaming abilities depending on whether or not you already own an Xbox console. ![]() ![]() The new platform feature, which they called Console Streaming, turns your Xbox One into your own personal Xbox server for free. Last year at E3, they announced they will have a cloud based service that will allow you to take your Xbox games anywhere. Microsoft could be one of the ones to come out on top. With Apple Arcade's recent launch and Google Stadia set to be released some time in November, the race is on to see who will take charge of the game streaming market.
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