![]() ![]() If GeForce Experience can't do it, Moonlight can't either. Since NVIDIA GameStream is a game streaming optimized protocol, it makes sense that they didn't opt for client-side cursor rendering.Īlso remember, Moonlight is just one side of a 2 way communication. This is a little trick that makes the mouse feel lower latency even though the actual video lags behind the cursor.Ĭlient-side cursor rendering is great for desktop usage because it fools your brain into thinking the stream is lower latency than it really is, but it falls down in gaming applications where the cursor is often drawn by the game engine itself and can't be drawn on the client. Other software like Chrome Remote Desktop and Microsoft Remote Desktop use client-side cursor rendering where the cursor is drawn on the client-side. That means the latency on your mouse cursor is exactly the same as the latency of the video stream itself. ![]() NVIDIA GameStream uses server-side cursor rendering which encodes the cursor directly into the video stream. Shouldn’t it be possible fix a simple mouse issue? Or is it more complicated than I think? One thing to note, just because you notice mouse lag when you're NOT in a game doesn't mean it will lag in the game as well! I've noticed some mouse lag and when launching and entering the game (after the map loads etc.) the lag is completely gone. I always launch mstsc.exe and just launch my games from within the desktop. When launching this feature via Moonlight it streams your entire desktop. The file "mstsc.exe" is located in "C:\Windows\system32\mstsc.exe". If you're wondering how to get to the mouse settings after connecting to the host via Moonlight, just add "mstsc.exe" to your GFE available items to stream. Same goes with keyboards, if you have keyboard issues chances are Moonlight just doesn't like what you have plugged in on the host side. Lastly, I've noticed improvements when keeping a basic mouse plugged in on the host instead of leaving my gaming mouse plugged in. I've also noticed improvements when I set the point speed to the same exact setting for the host and client. I've noticed huge improvements when disabling that feature. For some reason this option is automatically re-enabled each time you connect so you have to disable it each time. Use a basic mouse or any mouse without the DPI built-in.ĭisable "enhance pointer precision", on host AND client, under Control Panel > Mouse > Point Options. For some reason it causes extreme mouse lag. ![]() Make sure you're not using a gaming mouse with built-in DPI adjustment. I am being 100% serious about this problem, does anyone have any suggestions?Įdit: I have no problems with other mice, wired or wireless.I've had this issue as well and have tried so many things to fix it. I've even tried throwing the piece of crap against the wall and still nothing, and yes I really did throw it against the wall, however it hit a music CD case and broke it, the mouse if fine other than the buttons still being delayed by 5-10 seconds. I've tried taking the battery out, wired, wireless and nothing has fixed it, there's nothing on the Razer site about it and I've found nothing on Google. I've tried it on multiple computers and operating system, nothing different. I can move the mouse pointer around fine, there's no delay there, but the buttons take 5-10 seconds to register. ![]() I took a break for about a week, and when I went to use my Naga Epic all the buttons, left click, right click, side buttons, everything are delayed by about 5-10 seconds. I'm not sure if this is the correct site to post it on, but I'm having problems with my Razer Naga Epic. ![]()
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