Nvidia and Microsoft Announce 10-Year GeForce Now Partnership

Microsoft announced new 10 years partnership The partnership with Nvidia brings PC games created by Bethesda and Xbox Game Studios to Nvidia’s GeForce Now cloud gaming service.The first GeForce Now release will include gear 5, It’s already available on streaming services. deathloop, ground, and Pement, It will debut on May 25th.
Microsoft said it wants to extend its gaming capabilities so that users can play games whenever they want and on any device. This is very different from what we’ve seen with other big publishers, such as his Activision Blizzard, which removed the game from their platform citing licensing and content distribution concerns.
Ironically, this means the current banishment of Activision Blizzard games from the GeForce Now platform will be shortened. Microsoft is keen to add all the previously removed games once it finishes buying Activision Blizzard for $69 billion.
This new partnership with Nvidia is a great deal for GeForce Now subscribers. The platform as a whole struggles to attract many popular games from various publishers due to the aforementioned content distribution issues. The platform has acquired a relatively hefty amount of games with over 1,600 games, but still lacks popular titles such as: Jedi: SurvivorHogwarts Legacy, Uncharted, Spider-Man: Remastered (and its sequel)call of duty, more.
This new partnership, coupled with Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard, will inject a wealth of new and old games into the GeForce Now platform. These include games such as: Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 | Warzone 2.0, World of Warcraft, Diablo IV, StarCraft, Overwatch 2, Halo, and Forza Horizon. You’ll also see Bethesda games such as: Elder Scrolls, Fallout, red fall In addition, star field (when it releases later this year).
Microsoft said it wouldn’t be adding the entire game suite at once. Instead, it will be added in stages as the GeForce Now developer needs time to optimize the games he runs on Nvidia’s cloud his servers. Microsoft also reported that early versions of newly added titles will only be supported on Steam and the Epic Game Store until Microsoft and Nvidia add support for the Microsoft store in the coming months.
Microsoft says this is just the first in a series of partnerships to support its games on various cloud streaming services. In the future, Microsoft would like to support their games on multiple streaming platforms such as Boosteriod, Ubitus, EE and Nward.