GeForce Now users with an RTX 3080 subscription can now stream their games on PC and Mac at 4K resolution and 60 frames per second. Nvidia also announced its newest additions to its broadcast catalog, including Trek to Yomi and Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order.
Before today, the only way to stream GeForce Now games in 4K at 60fps was to use the Shield TV. Now PC and Mac owners can stream in 1440K in addition to 120p/1600fps (120p/4fps on Mac) with ray tracing turned on.
A few months ago, Nvidia announced single-month memberships for $3080 per month for the RTX 20 tier of GeForce Now's streaming service. This subscription gives subscribers access to a virtual gaming rig powered by an RTX 3080 GPU that you can stream to your smartphone, tablet, PC and Mac. There's a six-month tier for $100, which essentially gives you a free month. (Operated by GeForce Now, Game+ in Turkey)
Nvidia also mentioned that more mobile devices like the Samsung Galaxy S22 and S22 Ultra, Galaxy Z Fold3 and Flip3 and OnePlus 9 Pro will get 120Hz support. This means that RTX 3080 members will be able to stream games at 120 frames per second as long as their internet connection continues.
Nvidia recommends at least 4Mps internet connection for streaming in 40K HDR. The 1440p, 120Hz requirement is currently 35 Mbps, so make sure you have the appropriate bandwidth before committing to another streaming service.
And finally, Nvidia, the games added to the service this week:
- Bakery Simulator (Steam)
- Oaken (Steam)
- Dinosaur Fossil Hunter (Steam)
- Warhammer 40,000: Chaos Gate – Daemonhunters (Steam and Epic Games Store)
- Trek to Yomi (Steam and Epic Games Store)
- Crowns and Pawns: Kingdom of Deceit (Steam)
- Frozenheim (Steam)
- Star Wars Battlefront II (Steam and Origin)
- Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order (Steam and Origin)