GeForce Now picks up the OnLive mantle, allowing you to stream games direct to your PC

$25 for every 20 hours you play is going to add up fast.

Considering how much money Nvidia has spent on its Grid service (which was recently renamed to GeForce Now in October), Wednesday’s announcement at CES felt almost predictable: The company’s officially bringing GeForce Now to the PC (and Mac!).

Until this point, Nvidia’s game-streaming service was confined to the Shield—whether the earlier mobile version, the tablet, or the current Android TV incarnation. Now you can access the full library of games as if they were playing right on your PC.

Of course, they’re not playing directly on your PC. Like OnLive, GeForce Now streams games over the internet. It routs your mouse-and-keyboard inputs to a remote PC running the game, and then shoots the video back to you with as little latency as possible.

It’s an excellent concept—no need for your own graphics card! If you have a solid internet connection, you could play all of the hottest current titles on your six-year-old laptop or whatever. I actually did this with OnLive back in 2011, playing all the way through The Witcher on a 2007-era MacBook Pro.

And that’s who Nvidia is targeting. In theory, anyone who can stream Netflix can now also play graphics-intensive PC games. That’s a lot of people, in case you’re wondering. Just check out how many people in the Steam Hardware Survey are rocking an Intel graphics card. Nearly 20 percent of survey participants run on integrated graphics.

Nvidia GeForce Now Nvidia

Nvidia’s demo included a look at the GeForce Now interface.

OnLive died a couple of years ago though, and despite Nvidia’s backing, GeForce Now doesn’t look like it’ll fare too much better. It has a much better selection than OnLive did, with Nvidia touting Fallout 4 and the upcoming Mass Effect Andromeda among the games available to subscribers—but to play them, you’ll first have to deal with technical hurdles.

Depending on how sensitive you are to input latency, you may or may not find GeForce Now completely unplayable. And there’s no way to fix that. Not fully, anyway—the laws of physics govern how fast a signal can bounce to a server and back, meaning there’s always going to be some delay between your input and the corresponding video output. Shooters are particularly painful over any sort of streaming network for this reason.

Worse still is Nvidia’s pricing. If you thought it’d be cheaper to rent through Nvidia than to buy through Steam, you’re sorely mistaken: It’s $25 for 20 hours of gaming, or more than a dollar per hour. Ouch. Obviously I’m an outlier, seeing as I review games for a living, but at those rates I’d be paying $50 per week to play. Give me three months and I could buy a brand-new GTX 1080 with the same money. OnLive’s $10 per month subscription seems like an astounding bargain in comparison.

We’ll have to see whether Nvidia rethinks its pricing plan in the coming weeks—even a low-cost subscription with optional premium payments for newer games (like Mass Effect Andromeda) would be better than this burdensome flat-rate model.

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.
Keep up with the latest tech news, reviews and previews by subscribing to the Good Gear Guide newsletter.

Hayden Dingman

PC World (US online)
Show Comments

Most Popular Reviews

Latest Articles

Resources

PCW Evaluation Team

Cate Bacon

Aruba Instant On AP11D

The strength of the Aruba Instant On AP11D is that the design and feature set support the modern, flexible, and mobile way of working.

Dr Prabigya Shiwakoti

Aruba Instant On AP11D

Aruba backs the AP11D up with a two-year warranty and 24/7 phone support.

Tom Pope

Dynabook Portégé X30L-G

Ultimately this laptop has achieved everything I would hope for in a laptop for work, while fitting that into a form factor and weight that is remarkable.

Tom Sellers

MSI P65

This smart laptop was enjoyable to use and great to work on – creating content was super simple.

Lolita Wang

MSI GT76

It really doesn’t get more “gaming laptop” than this.

Featured Content

Product Launch Showcase

Don’t have an account? Sign up here

Don't have an account? Sign up now

Forgot password?