![]() There are 146 games on Luna, not including the Ubisoft titles you can stream if you also have an Ubisoft+ subscription, and they’re mostly old indies and retro games. It also has Stadia’s fatal flaw: no games. Stadia felt like the service I could access anywhere, while Luna is more of a walled garden. I invested in Chromecast for Stadia so I don’t have any Amazon streaming devices, Fire Tablets are lousy, and I have an Android phone, so the only way I can play Luna right now is on my PC. You can access games through a browser on PC, an Amazon Fire Stick or Fire TV, a Fire Tablet, or an iPhone. Related: I'll Always Miss What Stadia Could Have Been The streaming quality is excellent on my 200mb/s network, and except for a few random lag spikes, it was easy to forget that I was even streaming. Occasionally, I found I had to wait a few minutes for an available server before I could start playing, but it was still way faster than downloading a game. Accessing the library on the Luna website is easy, and you can use the controller or mouse and keyboard to navigate the menus, select a game, and start playing right away. ![]() After setting up the controller through the mobile app, it connects directly to your home network to give you a perfect connection without any latency, no matter what device you’re playing on. Amazon sent me a Luna controller to try out recently, and I was pleased to find that Luna does a lot of the same things that Stadia did well.
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