The whole promise of 5G is low latency after all. Nvidia says the two companies are “teaming up as 5G technical innovation collaborators,” but we’re basically talking about a marketing deal here. In this case, that means a deal with AT&T, which will give its customers on a 5G device on a 5G “unlimited” plan a free six-month GeForce Now priority membership. What’s maybe more important is that Nvidia continues to expand the overall GeForce Now ecosystem. because Rockstar dont want to work with Geforce Now Cloud Team. Not exactly Day One releases, but nice to have, I guess. I do own the game, but i cant play it on geforce and thats what make it me not playing it and a waysed of money. Today, the company announced a number of new partnerships, as well as the news that Electronic Arts Battlefield 4 from 2013 and Battlefield V from 2018 are now available for streaming on the service. All of these use a different business model, with GeForce Now making it easy for players to bring to the service games they bought elsewhere, with Nvidia offering a restricted free tier and then charging a membership fee for access to its servers, starting at $10 per month. At CES, Nvidia today put a strong emphasis on its GeForce Now game streaming service, its competitor to the likes of Google’s Stadia (that’s still around, right?), Amazon’s Luna and Microsoft’s increasingly popular Xbox Cloud Gaming service.