Nvidia GeForce Now members found that their games were not being streamed at the promised frame rate. Nvidia admits to intentionally capping fps in some games.
GeForce Now has always been an alternative to buying an expensive graphics card, but the new RTX 3080 tier makes cloud gaming feel more natural than ever.
The Steam Deck is a solution searching for a problem when the Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 can give most gamers a better experience.
Cloud gaming has a messaging problem, and we're here to solve it. Here's everything you need to know about cloud gaming, how it works, and if you should buy in.
Google Stadia and Shadow are two very different game-streaming services. Here, we've outlined the key differences between the two to help you make a decision.
Stadia promises to change how we play games, but Nvidia's GeForce Now should have Google worried. Here, we pitted the cloud gaming services against one another.
Amazon's cloud gaming platform offers up a collection of great games for players to stream. Here are the best games that you can play on the gaming service.
Amazon and Google are two cloud giants jumping into the gaming world, but which streaming service stands taller? We look at both to see which is truly best.
Apple recently filed a patent for an on-demand 5G cloud gaming service that could be similar in scope to Google Stadia, Xbox Game Pass, or PlayStation Now.
Some cloud gaming services have been hyped as Netflix for games but failed to deliver. Microsoft is different, and will bundle xCloud with Game Pass Ultimate.
Publishers such as Xbox and Warner Bros. continue to pull games from Nvidia's GeForce Now streaming service as the tech company forms official partnerships.
No console? No problem. In this guide, we walk you through how to play a variety of games online without a console, from cloud gaming to playing on your phone.
Amazon is reportedly working on Project Tempo, a cloud-gaming service that was supposed to launch an early version this year. Now, it may be delayed into 2021.
GeForce Now is a unique new streaming service, allowing users to play games that they already own on other storefronts and access a free version of the service.
Nvidia is moving to a weekly release schedule for new games supported by GeForce Now, with the first batch of additions including the award-winning Control.
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney pledged support to Nvidia's GeForce Now, as 2K Games pulled its titles from the service, joining Activision Blizzard and Bethesda.