18 months after launch, Google Stadia now supports Android TV

18 months after launch, Google Stadia now supports Android TV

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This would have been great at launch —

Google’s video game service finally works on Google’s TV platform.

Ron Amadeo

Google Stadia: Now For Televisions.

Enlarge / Google Stadia: Now for televisions.

Google

Televisions and video games have gone together since the beginning. It only makes sense: If you want to play a AAA video game, you often want to do it on the biggest, best screen in the house. So we’re a bit mystified that, just now, 18 months after launch, Google’s video game platform will support Google’s television platform.

Google has announced that starting this month, Stadia will have support for Android TV. First up is official support for the following devices:

  • Chromecast with Google TV
  • Hisense Android Smart TVs (U7G, U8G, U9G)
  • Nvidia Shield TV
  • Nvidia Shield TV Pro
  • Walmart Onn FHD Streaming Stick and UHD Streaming Device
  • Philips 8215, 8505, and OLED 935/805 Series Android TVs
  • Xiaomi MIBOX3 and MIBOX4

Google adds that for Android TV devices not on this list, users will be able to “opt into experimental support to play Stadia.” The company warns, “While this feature is still in development and not every Android TV OS device will work perfectly, you can now try out Stadia and play your favorite games on more screens than ever before.”

One of the big selling points of cloud gaming services like Stadia is that because your game is streamed over the Internet, the hardware requirements for graphically intensive games no longer apply. For Stadia, that has been the case if you’re using Chrome on a desktop computer or Android on a phone. You can use all sorts of existing Xbox and Playstation controllers on those platforms, but Google has yet to reach this point on Android TV, which represents Stadia’s biggest potential TV platform.

Stadia launched with one option for TV playback: the Chromecast Ultra, which was bundled with the controller in various $100-$129 starter packages. The bundle is still for sale, but as a standalone product, the Chromecast Ultra was discontinued in September 2020. The Chromecast Ultra’s replacement is the “Chromecast with Google TV,” a new product that converts the Chromecast from “dumb media receiver” to something that runs an Android TV-based operating system (Google TV is just the next version of Android TV) with a user interface and the ability to install apps.

If you’re going to try Stadia on one of these newly compatible Android TV devices, a hardwired Ethernet connection is preferable to a janky Wi-Fi stream. Google also says you’ll need “a compatible Bluetooth controller that you might already own,” but the company hasn’t provided a specific list yet.

Running on Android TV is a big deal for Stadia (why did Google try to bury this good news while WWDC is happening?), but it also seems like something that should have been announced 18 months ago. With the service already facing fleeing executives, the shutdown of its only in-house development studio, and signups that were reportedly “hundreds of thousands” under Google’s estimates, more open TV playback might be too little, too late.

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