It is currently not going quite smoothly for NVIDIA's GeForce NOW cloud gaming service. New titles are added every now and then, but some big publishers jump out.
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NVIDIA's recently launched streaming service has to accept another blow. After well-known publishers such as Activision / Blizzard, Bethesda and 2K had withdrawn their titles, Xbox Game Studios, Warner Bros, Codemasters and Klei Entertainment are now turning the corner.
At Xbox Game Studios, that would be bearable, as there were hardly any titles in the portfolio apart from Cuphead. However, the F1 and DiRT series from Codemasters are painful, as are the Batman titles, Mortal Kombat, the LEGO players and the Middle Earth series from Warner Bros.
After all, some large companies remain in the race. Ubisoft has just integrated the full lines of Far Cry and Assassin's Creed. Epic Games, Valve, Bungie and Bandai Namco are still on board.
The scramble for the rights of use of the players still seems to be an issue. GeForce NOW does not sell games (you must already have the titles on Steam, Uplay or Epic Games) and basically only rents you a cloud server, but NVIDIA uses the respective interfaces and some EULAs do not allow cloud gaming. Maybe some publishers are just keen on a share of NVIDIA's monthly fees, until the end of beta all publishers were still enthusiastic about it.
Regardless, NVIDIA plans to add more games to GeForce NOW in April and May. We are excited to see how it goes.