![]() Clicking the Task View button in the taskbar or pressing Windows Key + Tab summons the feature, which displays a-you guessed it-time line of your activity in supported apps, stretching back over the past. Timeline helps you pick up where you left off. Windows 10 also has a dedicated Gaming section in its Start menu Settings to let you tinker with options, including Xbox networking and parental controls. The Game Bar’s handy even if you don’t actually play, as it can be used to record video of any app-not just games. It’s great, and the May 2020 Update added more helpful features in the form of a frame rate counter and GPU temperature monitoring. The now-customizable interface packs a performance widget, an audio widget with system-wide and per-app controls, a Discord-like interface for Xbox Live friends, a photo gallery, and even full Spotify integration. Better yet, the May 2019 Update transformed it into a full blown overlay that does stuff no rivals offer. It’s always been able to take screenshots or videos of gameplay clips, but it also offers easy-peasy Beam game streaming and the intriguing Game Mode. ![]() ![]() If you’re into playing around on your PC, Windows 10’s Game Bar-summoned by pressing Windows + G in-game-holds all sorts of nifty extras. ![]()
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