It does still stand to be challenged by other services on the horizon, particularly Microsoft's coming xCloud service paired with Game Pass. Nvidia's answer to cloud gaming comes at a time when Google's offering of late last year, Stadia, is experiencing a bout of low confidence due to its high price-point, few games, and (seemingly) fewer updates. GeForce Now use requires a 15 Mbps internet connection, and recommends 25 Mbps, and functions on Windows PCs, Mac, TVs with Nvidia Shield, and Android phones. At launch, it supports over 30 free-to-play games as well as 1,000 more titles available through single-session installs on Steam. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners. ![]() Rather than offering its own library, GeForce Now allows users to add games from their existing libraries across multiple storefronts including Steam. GeForce, Shield, and GameStream are trademarks of NVIDIA Corporation. ![]() As it's a streaming service, all games are intended to function at these levels regardless of the power of the user's device. Nvidia GeForce Now is a cloud gaming service whereby you play games hosted on remote servers and streamed over the internet to one of the supported devices - much like Cloud Gaming with Xbox. Both plans support streaming at 1080p and 60fps. Free users may have to wait in queues to access servers and will be capped at sessions one hour long, though there's no limit to how many times a user can queue in any period. ![]() The founders edition costs $4.99 per month, and offers priority access to servers, play sessions up to six hours long, and access to games with ray tracing supported. The service is split into two tiers: a free edition, and a paid founders edition. Nvidia has officially launched its GeForce Now cloud gaming platform out of beta, opening up cloud gaming support across PC, Mac, Android, and TV (via Nvidia Shield) via existing PC game storefronts.
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