OnePlus owners get exclusive access to PUBG Mobile’s new 90fps support

PUBG Mobile, the version of the battle royale game designed for smartphones and tablets, is now available with support for 90fps gameplay…but only on certain OnePlus phones. The companies announced a partnership last week that gives OnePlus 7T series, 7 Pro, and 8 series device owners access to this smoother gameplay, but that exclusively won’t last forever.

What does that mean? You can find out exactly what we're talking about in this video.

If you have an OnePlus smartphone based on one of the aforementioned devices, then you'll be able to play PUBG Mobile's No Compromise difficulty. But you can hold on to your HTC U11S, as it still has trouble in the higher difficulties.

To access this new gameplay mode mentioned by OnePlus, you'll first need to set PUBG Mobile as your game developer account and open it. Once you've done that, you'll then need to enable the awesome bank of games available from OnePlus. Essentially, you'll need to open the number of games supported by PUBG Mobile according to what devices you’re interested in playing.

The aspect and feel of the game haven’t changed much too much from its earlier iterations in the past, so it probably makes sense that some of these games will work on OnePlus phones, while others won’t. Rachel McKee, the face of PUBG Mobile and her team, have said that the game will connect your account to the XDA portal so that you won’t lose any gameplay experience when you put one of your devices on hiatus.

PUBG Mobile is supposed to be released on Android v5.0 and v8.0 behind the scenes, so you'll probably have to wait a bit for it to appear on your phone. However, we hope it will accompany a recently released PC version down the road, as it provides a very different experience from playing on an Android phone.

Find out more about PUBG Mobile on its "What's New" page.

Canada's key defence partner with which there is a overwhelming consensus that tactical, electronic warfare will be a very important part of the future game, says Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan who is adding AEW in the mix for our U.S. allies and Japan.

Exactly where we are in AEW – and the current efforts in the major allied AEW effort – can really best be served by understanding the differences and similarities with the US effort. The AEW environment has broadest spectrum of capability, capability gaps and requirements.

This is essential "because it is difficult to say 'Here in Canada we will use AEW so we'll allocate 'just to air'. But we're spending more on weapons systems, how many equipment systems there get to support it even if the enemy has jamming
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