Activision Blizzard Nvidia GeForce now Nvidia employees said on the GeForce forum that the platform is a streaming platform.
The forum sent a covert notice saying, "As we take GeForce Now as the next step in its development, we have partnered with publishers to provide a powerful catalog of your PC games.
"This means constantly adding new games and sometimes having to delete games, similar to other digital service providers.
"At their request, please note that Activision Blizzard games will be removed from the service. Unfortunately, we want to work with Activision Blizzard to re-enable these games and more in the future.
"In addition to the hundreds of games currently supported, we are asking developers to add more than 1,500 games to the service. Look for weekly updates for new games we are adding."
The wording of the post suggests that the deleted game may resume service in the future, but for now, nothing has been confirmed.
The announcement did not include any comments from Activision Blizzard.
As stated by WindowsCentral, this move will affect Activision games, such as the Call of Duty series, and Blizzard games, such as Overwatch.
However, Destiny 2 will not be affected after Bungie's recent spin-off from Activision.
Nvidia GeForce Now enables you to stream games you already own from different PC libraries (such as Steam and UPlay) to different devices.
Using the cloud, GeForce Now lets you play games on less powerful PCs and laptops, macs, TVs connected to Nvidia Shield, and Android mobile devices as if they were more capable gear running high-end Nvidia hardware.
After a long beta period, Nvidia GeForce Now accounts are now widely available. You can sign up for one hour of streaming for free, or subscribe to an unlimited number of Founders accounts for £ 4.99 per month for 12 months and get 90 days of free use.
The service will compete with forthcoming next-generation products such as Google's Stadia streaming platform and Microsoft Xcloud.