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2K Games Has Just Been Removed From Nvidia’s Streaming Service, GeForce Now

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2K Games Has Just Been Removed From Nvidia's Streaming Service

Nvidia announced today that a 2K Games publisher will remove its library of GeForce Now’s new game service at 2K’s request.

“At the publisher’s request, please note that the 2K Games names will be removed from GeForce Now today. We are working with 2K Games to launch their games in the future,” said Noryia community leader Cory Banks. Nvidia Forum. When asked to comment, Nvidia mentioned The Verge on February 20 in this blog.

Among other things, 2K releases the BioShock trilogy, the Borderlands series, culture games, and the NBA 2K series. As a result, processor output is a huge loss for GeForce Now, which just came out of beta on February 4th. Nvidia now offers a premium version of cloud games as a “public trial” for $ 4.99 per month. However, the move to customer service bills has triggered a wave of remote gaming. Removal of games from 2K service comes after Activision Blizzard and Bethesda crashed last month, which means that many popular games are not available on the new public service.

2K, Activision Blizzard and Bethesda solved GeForce Now games during beta testing, but things have changed since the service left beta and Nvidia started loading the service (though there are very few free GeForce Now levels out there). A statement to The Verge 2K Games said it “requested that GeForce Now remove its games because there is currently no commercial agreement with Nvidia.” In the case of Activision Blizzard, Nvidia would never be able to keep Activision Blizzard names in GeForce Now after the beta release. Bethesda probably received GeForce Now from GeForce Now for the same reasons, probably because of a licensing dispute.

The outlook for cloud gaming services is great: Look at all your games online with great accuracy, regardless of whether your computer, console or phone has the right devices. But like the raw content, we see on streaming services, the early years of cloud gaming have shown that these kinds of licenses can determine which games you can play. My colleague Nick Statt wrote an excellent article describing the situation that I recommend reading to understand the difficulties associated with a service like GeForce Now.

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