Tech Advisor

Activision Blizzard pulls its games from Nvidia’s GeForce Now

Publisher pulls games. BRAD CHACOS reports

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Nvidia and Activision Blizzard seem like close partners. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is one of the biggest games to take advantage of the real-time ray tracing capabiliti­es in modern GeForce graphics cards, and games like Overwatch have graced Nvidia’s GeForce Now for most of the gaming-from-thecloud service’s multi-year beta. But a mere week after

GeForce Now fully launched and obliterate­d Google Stadia’s value propositio­n, Activision Blizzard’s games are being yanked from the service at the publisher’s request, effective immediatel­y.

No more playing Overwatch on your old laptop. No more Diablo III on your phone. No more playing the latest World of Warcraft raid boss in way better fidelity than your potato PC can normally handle. No more real-time ray tracing from the cloud in Modern Warfare.

Nvidia announced its removal with the following statement: “As we take GeForce Now to the next step in its evolution, we’ve worked with publishers to on board a robust catalogue of your PC games. This means continuall­y adding new games, and on occasion, having to remove games – similar to other digital service providers. Per their request, please be advised Activision Blizzard games will be removed from the service. While unfortunat­e, we hope to work together with Activision Blizzard to re-enable these games and more in the future. In addition to the hundreds of games currently supported, we have over 1,500 games that developers have asked to be on-boarded to the service. Look for weekly updates as to new games we are adding.”

On the plus side, since Bungie recently broke away from Activision Blizzard, you’ll still be able to play Destiny 2 on GeForce Now. The game is central to Google Stadia’s £8.99 per month Pro subscripti­on, but you can play it for no cost whatsoever on GeForce Now, as the base game’s free-to-play and Nvidia offers a totally free tier. Still, Activision Blizzard’s withdrawal is a major disappoint­ment. Sure, GeForce Now still offers

vastly more games than Stadia and other cloud-based challenger­s, but Blizzard’s Warcraft, Diablo, StarCraft, and Hearthston­e are some of the most-played and most-loved franchises in PC history. Call of Duty, meanwhile, tops sales charts year-in and year-out, and Modern Warfare’s removal means you won’t be able to try out its ray tracing with your fancy GeForce Now Founders subscripti­on. This hurts.

It’s also a bit perplexing.

We’ve written at length about GeForce Now and why it rocks, and its value propositio­n isn’t limited to gamers alone. Nvidia’s service doesn’t sell you games directly. Instead, it basically rents you a gaming PC in the cloud, and you sign into gaming platforms like Steam, the Epic Game Store, and (formerly) Battle.net to play games you already own. Nvidia doesn’t take an extra cut. By giving you access to more powerful hardware than you might already own, GeForce Now

effectivel­y encourages you to buy more games through existing storefront­s. It feels like a win-win for everybody involved. No more, alas.

Fortunatel­y, GeForce Now remains an outstandin­g value propositio­n. While Stadia is limited to a couple dozen titles that won’t work on any other platforms, Nvidia’s service still supports nearly 400 games, with new titles added every week. You can also install another 1,000 or so ‘single-session’ games through Steam, which haven’t been officially optimized for the service yet, but can still be played on-demand, with Steam cloud saves tracking your progress. Since Activision Blizzard’s biggest titles live in the company’s own Battle.net client, don’t expect that to work as a side door here.

Fingers crossed that Activision Blizzard and other holdout publishers like EA decide to play nice with

GeForce Now – and again, Nvidia’s service only lets you play games you already own and paid for on other platforms. It’s not an all-you-can-eat-buffet subscripti­on like Netflix or Amazon Prime. Activision isn’t losing out even if the company decides to start its own rival cloud gaming service. GeForce Now is more like playing a game you already own on another PC, just one in the cloud. If you’re as disappoint­ed about this decision as we are, your best course of action is reaching out directly to Activision Blizzard’s support and letting them know it, especially if the decision prevents you from playing games you’ve purchased.

In the meantime, if you need to level up your hardware to be able to play Activision Blizzard games you used to play over GeForce Now, be sure to check out our guide to the best graphics cards for PC gaming. Local games aren’t disappeari­ng any time soon, as this headache proves.

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 ??  ?? Nvidia’s GeForce Now lets you play PC games across a wide variety of devices
Nvidia’s GeForce Now lets you play PC games across a wide variety of devices
 ??  ?? Nvidia GeForce Now still has a huge selection of games for you to choose from
Nvidia GeForce Now still has a huge selection of games for you to choose from

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