In the heels of Razer on the break of direct sales of laptops in the United States (thanks to those in place, outside, but always a lot for China Prices), the company has officially launched its remote game streaming application. Razer PC Remote Play, which the company has deployed in beta version at CES 2025, is now officially available for iOS and Android.
Razer can be a little late at the party here, and its application is not the only way to broadcast your PC games to other devices. (For example, the Steam version has offered similar features for six years.) But Razer’s application has a neat tip: it automatically adjusts the resolution and frequency of image of the game to correspond to that of your mobile device. Thus, you can avoid the black bars that you get with services that only disseminate games in a fixed appearance ratio.
The company says it works with all iOS and Android game controllers, and the iPad version has the keyboard, mouse and trackpad support. It works with titles from several windows (including Steam, Epic, PC Game Pass and more). The application uses the AV1 video codec, which, according to Razer, increases quality and reduces latency.
The configuration requires RAZER Nexus and PC applications Remote reading on your mobile device and the Cortex Razer on the host PC. After signing with your ID Razer, the two should couple automatically and you can go to business. You can download the application now from Google Play and the App Store.
This article originally appeared on engadget to