After scooping up some Bandai Namco Europe video games (opens in new tab) two weeks in the past for its cloud gaming service, Nvidia has managed to get Capcom on board, bringing with it three Resident Evil video games.
From in the present day, you’ll drop into Resident Evil 2, Resident Evil 3, and Resident Evil 7 Biohazard by way of the sport streaming service.
That ought to be excellent news for anybody already working GeForce Now on their telephone or TV and who already owns any of these video games on Steam. GeForce Now will simply seize them off your account, no have to repurchase.
Past Resi, certainly one of our favorite new arrivals can be going to be accessible to stream by way of GeForce Now from in the present day: Shadows of Doubt. I performed an entire lot of that sport’s demo, and completely cherished it.
Here is the total record of video games headed to GeForce Now in the present day:
- Shadows of Doubt
- Afterimage
- Roots of Pacha
- Bramble: The Mountain King
- The Swordsmen X: Survival
- Poker Membership
- Resident Evil 2
- Resident Evil 3
- Resident Evil 7 Biohazard
The opposite announcement from Nvidia in the present day is the arrival of latest SuperPODS, which is a flowery title for Nvidia putting in a bunch of RTX 4080s, or RTX 4080-a-likes, in its datacenters. Customers with their closest GeForce Now datacenter in Stockholm, Miami, and Portland can entry the very best tier of sport streaming Nvidia presently affords, offering they’ve the Final tier.
We have examined the Final tier and known as it “one of the best ways to bag an RTX 40-series GPU (opens in new tab)” on the time (although this was previous to the arrival of any cheaper 40-series playing cards accessible in the present day), however keep in mind there are caveats. Specifically, the occasional bug or boot concern, but in addition it is going to all rely upon how good your web connection is.
In different Nvidia GeForce Now information, the UK has blocked Microsoft’s buy of Activision Blizzard on cloud gaming grounds, which implies the deal Nvidia struck with Microsoft (opens in new tab) to convey Activision video games to the streaming platform could have gone up in smoke.