World of Warcraft
GeForce Now
Nvidia
Activision Blizzard
Hearthstone
Overwatch
Netflix
Google
Google Cloud
Stadia
Xbox Game Pass
Capcom, Electronic Arts
Square Enix
Hulu or Disney Plus
ActivisionBlizzard
Polygon
No matching tags
No matching tags
Sekiro
Blizzard
Google Stadia
YouTube
the Epic Games Store
That’s because of the one big catch with GeForce Now: It only lets you stream games that you already own, with support for marketplaces like Steam, Uplay, and the Epic Games Store.Users can try the service for free in one-hour sessions, or sign up for a one-year “Founders” membership, which is free for 90 days and $4.99 per month for the next nine months — so in essence, subscribers are paying for priority access, and it’s unclear whether Nvidia is compensating game publishers for making their titles available on GeForce Now. Either way, the service has had a somewhat disconcerting debut: Games from major third-party publishers such as Capcom, Electronic Arts, and Square Enix were available in the beta but were nowhere to be found at launch, and now you can add Activision Blizzard to that list.Nobody who subscribes to an on-demand streaming service like Hulu or Disney Plus has any expectation of owning the content, and at this point, most of them probably understand that the next month could always bring news of their favorite movie or TV show leaving the platform.
As said here by Samit Sarkar