Write what you are looking for and press enter to begin your search!

Logo
live-news-icon

Live News

Cel-Shaded Action RPG Dungeons Of Hinterberg Launches This July: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here // Palworld To Add New Pals In A Major Update This Summer: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here // X-Men 97 Final Trailer Makes Fun Of The Fox Movie Costumes & Teases Cable, A Swarm Of Prime Sentinels: In an intense match, the Lone Wolves came out victorious. Read all about the big night here
post-16 post-13

Nvidia Launches Cloud Gaming Service GeForce Now, But No Support In Asia Yet

After being in beta for several years (since 2017), Nvidia is finally launching its cloud gaming service GeForce Now. Unlike the (dead on arrival) Google Stadia, GeForce Now doesn’t offer a console-like experience with its own exclusive lineup of games.

Nvidia’s GeForce Now connects with Steam, Epic Games Store, GoG, or Blizzard Battle.net accounts so players can play games that they have already purchased on those third-party digital platforms. These games can then be played on any PC, MacOS, or Android device if they have the app installed.

However, GeForce Now isn’t free, as it costs US$5 (or roughly RM20+) per month to access the Founders Edition, which allows players to receive up to six hours of gameplay at a time, ray tracing support, and priority access. There’s also a free account option available, though players will be limited to one-hour sessions at a time and subject to queues if the server is too busy.

As for now, GeForce Now won’t be available everywhere in the world, as players have to located somewhere near a data centre to reduce latency for playable games. There are currently nine data centres in the US, five in Europe, one in Korea and two in Japan. However, it’s not supported yet in other parts of the world and Asia, including Southeast Asian countries like Malaysia.

Nvidia recommends 50Mbps for the best possible experience, 30Mbps for 1080p60, and 15Mbps for 720p60. However, according to Gizmodo, those speeds don’t really guarantee good performance. It looks like all these cloud gaming services tend to suffer from the same problems.


 

Related News

post-07
Witcher Origin Series Trailer Showcases Michelle Yeoh Doing What She Does Best

Netflix just released a new trailer for its upcoming The Witcher prequel dubbed Blood Origin, which stars Michelle Yeoh as a butt-kicking elf in a dar...

post-07
NVIDIA Announces RTX 3060 At CES 2021

During CES 2021, Nvidia announced the GeForce RTX 3060, which comes with 12GB of G6 memory with 13 Shader-TFlops, 25 RT-TFlops, and 101 Tensor-TFlops....

post-07
Bilibili Arrives in Singapore and Malaysia With Exclusive Summer Anime

Southeast Asia's leading animation video platform, Bilibili, is launching in Singapore and Malaysia with over 35 anticipated summer anime releases i...

Write a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tournament Tool Kit

Kakuchopurei Community