NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

stricknook101's avatar
Sep 24, 2022

C7000V2 can it handle oculus game streaming

Hello all, is my ac 1900 C7000V2 going to be enough to run my oculus 2 with steam and or cloud gaming ?

Do I need to bite a bullet and get a 6E.?

3 Replies

  • michaelkenward's avatar
    michaelkenward
    Guru - Experienced User

    stricknook101 wrote:

    Hello all, is my ac 1900 C7000V2 going to be enough to run my oculus 2 with steam and or cloud gaming ?

    Do I need to bite a bullet and get a 6E.?


     

    This is one of this impossible questions. It depends on many factors. What are you playing on? Oculus 2 connected to what? How is it connected to the Internet? How fast is our Internet service?

     

    What is "a 6E"? Wifi 6?

     

    Have you asked people who use Oculus 2?

     

    Search - NETGEAR Communities – Oculus

     

    • stricknook101's avatar
      stricknook101
      Aspirant
      Ok, my bad
      Xfinity 900 mb
      5g channel as optimized as my skill allows and help ....helped
      Plutosphere has a latency issue. No pc, no laptop and no advanced phone.
      Cloud gaming on a virtual pc is what I've got.
      So oh great and wise silicon wizards. ....upgrade now to a 6e?
      I'm not that good..I still haven't figured out how to put steam on my headset, but I have my eye on high graphics games. I am so exhausted with atari 2600 graphics and want some games with depth and compelling graphics.
      Virtual desktop won't work .
      • michaelkenward's avatar
        michaelkenward
        Guru - Experienced User

        stricknook101 wrote:
        I still haven't figured out how to put steam on my headset, but I have my eye on high graphics games. I am so exhausted with atari 2600 graphics and want some games with depth and compelling graphics.
        Virtual desktop won't work .

        The modem/router just handles the Internet connection and delivers wifi. For anything else, you'd have to ask the people behind the  hardware/software.