This Surface Neo patent shows the potential XCloud has on Windows devices
A recent patent filing (via PatentScope) has offered us a more detailed look at some of the Surface Neo’s technical capabilities, alongside some tantalizing possibilities for future user scenarios.
Microsoft’s Project XCloud is a massive undertaking in the gaming division, as the teams ramp up to deliver console-quality game streaming content to any device. The service is now in-testing on Android and iOS, with a Windows version soon to follow. Thus far, the service has an avalanche of high-quality content, easily beating out rivals like Google’s Stadia. Although we still don’t know what the monetization model looks like, the promise and potential is clearly there.
So far, we generally think about Project XCloud as being a “mobile” affair, bringing Xbox games to handsets. I’ve found in my own testing that larger tablets provide a far more preferable experience, owing to UI scaling issues. Some games are simply too damn hard to see, even on a large phone like my Galaxy Note 9. It is then, encouraging, that Microsoft seems to be exploring ways to bring XCloud to tablets more ergonomically.
Surface Neo gamepad attachment?
Naturally, Windows 10X comes with some drawbacks. As a stripped-down version of Windows, it will most likely lack many of the APIs necessary to run full Win32 games from Steam or the new Xbox Store on PC, for example. This is one area where Project XCloud could really help devices like Neo to shine.
In this example, the input device 102 is manifest as a keyboard device. In other implementations, the input device can be manifest as a trackpad or game controller, among others.
The patent-ese lingo is vague enough to avoid any hard specifics on what a “game controller” input device might look like. In the Surface Duo trailer, for example, we see the “input device” manifest as a touch-based virtual gamepad on the second display. I’d argue that no Xbox gamer on earth would prefer to play this way, given the choice. The lack of tactile controls is simply not what Xbox games are designed for, generally.
XCloud opportunity for low-power Windows devices
The obvious question boils down to ergonomics. Playing XCloud titles on a squished screen isn’t a pleasant experience and the phone clips on offer feel like a bandaid solution to a bigger problem. Even if the “game controller” references in the Surface Neo patent turn out to be nothing, it is encouraging that Microsoft is at least thinking about ways to bring more tactile controls to XCloud on its future devices — without having us carrying controllers and clips around.