Microsoft seems to be looking into whether Xbox Quick Resume can also come to Windows

An Xbox executive spoke during an interview at the ASUS ROG Ally introduction about features such as Xbox Quick Resume, which would make it possible to take sessions from a desktop to a handheld PC, for example.

Roanne Sones , Corporate VPof Xbox, said this in a group discussion with two top executives from ASUS and one from AMD during the launch event of the ROG Ally, the handheld PC from ASUS. She states that the Ally makes Microsoft “think differently” about mobile gaming on Windows. Mainly, she talks about you “starting gaming on your PC, taking [the Ally] with you and wanting to pick right back up where you were” and close that story with, “How do we feel about bringing that to the Windows platform?” to bring?”

What Sones describes are two functions. One is support for a system to go to sleep without crashing a running game. In principle, this is already possible in Windows, although it will differ from game to game whether a game will ‘survive’. This is also a feature of the Steam Deck, but again it is not foolproof; a game can crash. It is conceivable that game makers, together with the OS maker, are responsible for combating these types of crashes.

The second feature concerns a more ‘aggressive’ use of cloud saves. Sones describes an almost seamless experience when switching from PC to, for example, this handheld. For this, the save data must be easily and quickly transferred to the cloud, so that the Ally can pick it up and the player can continue from the point where he or she was, or at least a point close to it.

Here too, let the Steam Deck to see how that can work. If the Deck is put to sleep during gameplay, savedata will be sent to the Steam cloud first uploaded so that the player could continue on a desktop, for example. If he does, he will first be asked on the PC whether he would rather close the game on the Deck completely first, in order to get a more recent save in the cloud if possible. The Xbox has a similar system, albeit without a handheld in the game.

These are not firm promises from Microsoft, but the fact that the company is talking about it , shows that it has some confidence and intention in this area. In addition, it appeared earlier that Microsoft is working on how to make Windows 11 more suitable for handhelds; in April a leaked presenting possible OS customizations for it. Microsoft seems to be more interested in handheld PCs due to the popularity of the Steam Deck, which was released in February.

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