![]() Racing around the track in GRID 2 was just as good too, and in a game where reaction time is vital, I was still swinging my muscle car around corners with some semblance of control via the keyboard. Sadly that only included GRID 2 and Shadow of Mordor at the time, but jumping into Mordor was a thoroughly pleasing experience, especially having used the same game to test the sadly lacking NZXT Doko (opens in new tab). Suddenly I had unrestricted access to the installed wonders of my connected test rig. Still the clicking issue persisted, but alt-tabbing out and back into the Steam Big Picture Mode screen-which starts up automatically when Limelight is activated on the RP2-solved it for me. Trying again at a lower resolution, 720p/60Hz, things were suddenly lag-free. ![]() Not a great start, but perseverance does pay off. And even with the mouse pointer moving at my behest-some four seconds behind me-I couldn’t get it to register any clicks, however frantically I tried. And when you try streaming at 1080p/60Hz on the RP2, things go wrong real quick. ![]() To start with, I threw up every in-game setting as high as possible and tried to stream at 1080p/60Hz. With a little Linux Fu and some command line experimentation it wasn’t long before I had Limelight installed on the RP2 and connected up to our test rig with an Nvidia card in place. Yes, Limelight is reliant on your host PC being an Nvidia-based machine, but with that in place you can then stream from your desktop rig, across your home network, to an attached Raspberry Pi 2.
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