GeForce Now Raises Prices in Europe and Canada, US Prices Unaffected. Nvidia confirmed that the US will not be affected by the price increases.
The global landscape of cloud gaming is changing as Nvidia announced that its cloud gaming service GeForce Now is about to become a little more expensive in Europe and Canada.
In a new blog post, Nvidia is raising prices for its Priority and Founders Ultimate subscription tiers starting November 1. Nvidia notes that if new members sign up for a Priority or Ultimate membership before November 1, they will retain current pricing for six months. Prices vary depending on the country and the number of months of subscription. Nvidia didn't mention that US pricing would increase in the post, and in an email to IGN, a company spokesperson confirmed that pricing for US users will remain the same.
You can check the image below to see the new pricing and which European countries are affected.
Unlike its rivals, primarily Xbox Cloud Gaming, GeForce Now offers a Free subscription tier, but it is very limited as those with this tier have a session length of one hour and can only stream games at a lower resolution. In contrast, paid subscription tiers offer 4K resolution and longer gaming sessions with RTX enhancements enabled, while the top-tier Premium subscription offers paid gamers access to a cloud gaming RTX 4080 hardware to stream their favorite games.
Nvidia released GeForce Now in beta in 2015, with the full launch five years later. GeForce Now's approach is unusual compared to other cloud gaming services, as GeForce Now's library is based on games you own on digital PC game stores like Steam and PC Game Pass. Not every game from these stores is available on the service, but Nvidia updates GeForce Now library support weekly.
The announcement comes at an interesting time for Nvidia's cloud gaming service, which has made major strides in recent years. Nvidia has signed a deal with Microsoft to bring first-party Xbox Games to GeForce Now, in addition to offering access to more powerful servers depending on your membership. GeForce Now is also one of two options for players to play Fortnite on their mobile devices since the native mobile versions were removed from the App Store and Google Play three years ago.
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