These include support for hardware-accelerated OpenGL, which will speed up display and keep any lag to a minimum.
PULSEAUDIO WINDOWS 10 INSTALL
It's also a good idea to install a WSL-aware graphics driver, with versions available from Nvidia, AMD, and Intel. It's a lot closer to using the xrdp techniques TechRepublic looked at recently, building on Microsoft's own Remote Desktop Protocol and the developing Linux Wayland user interface technology to deliver Linux applications directly to the Windows desktop. There's no need to install an X Server in Windows (which had to run in an insecure mode to allow WSL 2's random IP addresses to work) or run scripts to configure networking every time you start WSL.
If you've used X11 with WSL you are going to find WSLg a lot easier to get working. On the Windows side, it adds a plug-in to the Windows RDP client to allow it to deliver application windows without any work on your part. It's an ideal tool for this, providing only the minimum services needed to support the components of WSLg: XWayland, Weston, PulseAudio and FreeRDP. Microsoft has built it on top of its own internal Linux distribution, CBL-Mariner, which is designed to be a minimal Linux for use in containers and on edge devices.
It's actually a whole new Linux distribution that runs alongside your WSL Linux, adding hooks for video and audio to it, setting environment variables to redirect X and Wayland calls, along with audio. WSLg is a fascinating piece of engineering.