

The Shield runs Android TV games optimized and ported for the device are offered through a separate Shield Store app. The console ships with one wireless controller a wireless micro-USB-rechargeable remote with voice control and a headphone jack is sold separately but is no longer available from official channels. For internet connections, it supports gigabit Ethernet and 802.11ac Wi-Fi. 20 Shield models with a 500 GB hard drive are branded as Shield Pro. The Shield can either contain 16 GB of internal flash storage or a 500 GB hard drive, expandable via microSD card or removable storage. The device supports 4K resolution output at 60 FPS over an HDMI 2.0 output, with support for HEVC-encoded video. The Shield utilizes Nvidia's Tegra X1 system-on-chip, based the ARM Cortex-A57 CPU and Nvidia's Maxwell microarchitecture GPU, with 3 GB of RAM. In 2019, Nvidia refreshed the Shield TV lineup with upgraded processors, and revised the base model with a smaller form factor and less internal storage. In 2017, Nvidia released a refreshed version of the 16 GB Shield, which has a smaller form factor that drops MicroSD and infrared support, comes with an updated controller, and is otherwise identical in hardware to the original model. It is produced in two models, with the second Shield TV Pro model distinguished primarily by increased internal storage. As with all other Android TV devices, it can also stream content from various sources using apps, and also supports 4K resolution video. First released in May 2015, the Shield was initially marketed by Nvidia as a microconsole, emphasizing its ability to play downloaded games and stream games from a compatible PC on a local network, or via the GeForce Now subscription service. The Nvidia Shield TV ( Shield Android TV or Nvidia Shield ) is an Android TV-based digital media player produced by Nvidia as part of its Shield brand of Android devices. 802.11ac 2.4 GHz & 5 GHz Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, Gigabit Ethernet, USB 3.0, HDMI 2.0
