Tuesday, February 21st 2023
Microsoft and NVIDIA Announce Expansive New Gaming Deal
On Tuesday, Microsoft and NVIDIA announced the companies have agreed to a 10-year partnership to bring Xbox PC games to the NVIDIA GeForce NOW cloud gaming service, which has more than 25 million members in over 100 countries. The agreement will enable gamers to stream Xbox PC titles from GeForce NOW to PCs, macOS, Chromebooks, smartphones and other devices. It will also enable Activision Blizzard PC titles, such as Call of Duty, to be streamed on GeForce NOW after Microsoft's acquisition of Activision closes.
"Xbox remains committed to giving people more choice and finding ways to expand how people play," said Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer. "This partnership will help grow NVIDIA's catalog of titles to include games like Call of Duty, while giving developers more ways to offer streaming games. We are excited to offer gamers more ways to play the games they love.""Combining the incredibly rich catalog of Xbox first party games with GeForce NOW's high-performance streaming capabilities will propel cloud gaming into a mainstream offering that appeals to gamers at all levels of interest and experience," said Jeff Fisher, senior vice president for GeForce at NVIDIA. "Through this partnership, more of the world's most popular titles will now be available from the cloud with just a click, playable by millions more gamers."
The partnership delivers increased choice to gamers and resolves NVIDIA's concerns with Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard. NVIDIA therefore is offering its full support for regulatory approval of the acquisition.
Microsoft and NVIDIA will begin work immediately to integrate Xbox PC games into GeForce NOW, so that GeForce NOW members can stream PC games they buy in the Windows Store, including third-party partner titles where the publisher has granted streaming rights to NVIDIA. Xbox PC games currently available in third-party stores like Steam or Epic Games Store will also be able to be streamed through GeForce NOW.
Visit the GeForce NOW website for more information on the service and follow along every GFN Thursday for the latest news, including release dates for upcoming Microsoft game titles coming to the GeForce NOW service.
The agreement was announced today at a Microsoft press conference in Brussels, Belgium. Microsoft also shared today that it finalized a 10-year agreement to bring the latest version of Call of Duty to the Nintendo platform following the merger with Activision.
Source:
NVIDIA
"Xbox remains committed to giving people more choice and finding ways to expand how people play," said Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer. "This partnership will help grow NVIDIA's catalog of titles to include games like Call of Duty, while giving developers more ways to offer streaming games. We are excited to offer gamers more ways to play the games they love.""Combining the incredibly rich catalog of Xbox first party games with GeForce NOW's high-performance streaming capabilities will propel cloud gaming into a mainstream offering that appeals to gamers at all levels of interest and experience," said Jeff Fisher, senior vice president for GeForce at NVIDIA. "Through this partnership, more of the world's most popular titles will now be available from the cloud with just a click, playable by millions more gamers."
The partnership delivers increased choice to gamers and resolves NVIDIA's concerns with Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard. NVIDIA therefore is offering its full support for regulatory approval of the acquisition.
Microsoft and NVIDIA will begin work immediately to integrate Xbox PC games into GeForce NOW, so that GeForce NOW members can stream PC games they buy in the Windows Store, including third-party partner titles where the publisher has granted streaming rights to NVIDIA. Xbox PC games currently available in third-party stores like Steam or Epic Games Store will also be able to be streamed through GeForce NOW.
Visit the GeForce NOW website for more information on the service and follow along every GFN Thursday for the latest news, including release dates for upcoming Microsoft game titles coming to the GeForce NOW service.
The agreement was announced today at a Microsoft press conference in Brussels, Belgium. Microsoft also shared today that it finalized a 10-year agreement to bring the latest version of Call of Duty to the Nintendo platform following the merger with Activision.
36 Comments on Microsoft and NVIDIA Announce Expansive New Gaming Deal
I still prefer to run my games from my own PC though....
I can guess which apps will be included in the next update cycle :laugh:
Pretty much why unlimited data plans are going up funny no yearly pricing posted ;)
I'll stick with limited data plan and save a bundle :cool:
Plus I spit on the birth of game streaming.
Also I think it dumb ass ffffff for MS who sells hardware to help create a Possible behemoth to kill their own shit in ten years.
Let Game streaming die (IMHO) it's ass in a package, look at stadia.
I can rent a box in any server and load up my steam (or whatever) library, but I can only use pre-approved games on an optimized service from Nvidia because...?
Frankly I don't really care seeing I have no interest in either xbox nor gf now
I use mostly epic and even if they to offer anywhere blab.. I still wouldn't use it gf now.. subscriptionware.
Sony and Nintendo are less likely to do theses kinds of things because their existing model would be affected by it
if every Nintendo game came to Windows, that would affect Nintendo
if every Xbox game comes to Switch, it won't negatively affect Xbox
And the ability of play Game Pass games on Geforce Now is cool, not that I would ever use it since Internet in my country suck
It's easy to interpret this with whatever angle you want, but reality is Microsoft is not an underdog in anything. They're one of biggest companies on the planet, doesn't matter that they're not "top dog" in gaming (they're not top dog because there also isn't one, something they're desperately trying to change), they're still huge and shouldn't simply be allowed to buy their way to the top.
MS just said goodbye to their Activision acquisition for sure.
Well played. Consolidate a bit more why don't you, in the battle for 'who controls the cloud'