Even more publishers are pulling their games from Geforce Now
The cloud gaming service is looking more and more barren as Warner Bros. and Xbox Game Studios pull their catalogue from the platform.
The cloud gaming service is looking more and more barren as Warner Bros. and Xbox Game Studios pull their catalogue from the platform.
Video games have and always will be dominated by giants. Provided that said corporation has the cash to splash on developing a new game and getting the word out via fancy marketing that dials the hype up to eleven, those massive brands with plenty of bank aren’t going to vanish overnight. And who has deeper pockets than Amazon at this point in human history?
Nvidia’s GeForce Now launched out of beta last week, and it’s already given Google and its cloud-based platform Stadia something to worry about. According to those who’ve used it, it runs well enough, enables advanced features like RTX, and best of all, lets you play games from your Steam and Epic Game Store libraries without having to purchase games anew. As a result it has a significantly larger and more robust library of games.
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A spooky European village. Properly scary castle mania. Vampires. Werewolves! The only thing more frightening, is a glimpse at your empty bank account when it comes to deciding whether or not you can grab Resident Evil Village this month. Capcom's successor to its long-running survival-horror franchise is finally out, and if you've read our review then you know the game is a winner on multiple levels.
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