NVIDIA Partners With Electronic Arts to Bring Hit Games to GeForce NOW
NVIDIA today announced that Electronic Arts is bringing more of its hit games to the NVIDIA GeForce NOW cloud gaming service, beginning with Battlefield 1 Revolution, Mirror's Edge Catalyst, Unravel Two, Dragon Age : Inquisition and Apex Legends.
GeForce NOW membership has more than doubled in the last year, giving Electronic Arts access to more than 12 million gamers. Collectively, over 20 million hours of gameplay are streamed each month via GeForce NOW, from 30 data centers in more than 70 countries.
GeForce NOW allows Electronic Arts games to be played with legendary GeForce performance by gamers who may not have a gaming PC— that includes more than 1 billion underpowered PCs and incompatible devices, like phones, tablets and Chromebooks. Nearly 80 percent of the devices that currently access GeForce NOW would not otherwise be capable of playing the latest PC games.
GeForce NOW is connected to the most popular game stores — including Steam and Epic Games Store — a win-win for developers and gamers. No additional development work or porting is required of developers, while gamers get access to hit titles from their library without having to purchase the games again, or having to deal with hefty downloads, patches and updates. Electronic Arts games can be added quickly to GeForce NOW through regular "GFN Thursday" releases.
Stream It Now
Five games from some of Electronic Arts' most popular franchises are available on GeForce NOW, starting today. Members can stream Battlefield 1 Revolution to experience immersive untold stories of World War I; become a heroic leader and restore order against agents of chaos in Dragon Age: Inquisition; solve puzzles with the family-friendly Unravel Two; or dive into a fast-paced, free-running adventure with Mirror's Edge Catalyst.
These additions from Electronic Arts join one of the most-played games on GeForce NOW, Apex Legends. The high-speed hero shooter has already been streamed by more than 1 million members.
Global Availability
The initial set of Electronic Arts games is streaming today in more than 70 countries, including through the GeForce NOW Alliance network — a partnership of operators using NVIDIA RTX Servers and NVIDIA cloud-gaming software to expand and provide the GeForce NOW cloud gaming experience globally.
Alliance partners in Russia, Turkey, Korea, Japan, Taiwan and Saudi Arabia were recently joined by new regional operators in Australia, Singapore, Brazil and select other South American countries.
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Senior Member
Posts: 138
Joined: 2015-06-17
Well, this is no surprise. Nvidia has been working hard to get people their EA games on GeForce Now. During the alpha/beta days of Geforce now, we had many publishers on the service, but once Nvidia went from beta to final and started charging money, many publishers left the service and made Nvidia take down their games. So many users complained about this and Nvidia couldn't do anything about it until they signed an agreement with the publishers, now many games are back, but many are still missing. There is no surprise that EA games are coming back to the service, as it is on Xbox game pass and Playstation similar to Ubisoft connect. While other publishers are not coming yet or in fact at all