GeForce Now celebrates sixth anniversary with new games and RTX upgrades

NVIDIA's GeForce Now cloud gaming service marks its sixth anniversary, having streamed over one billion hours of gameplay since launch. February 2026 brings new titles, including tactical shooters Delta Force and PUBG: Blindspot, alongside support for RTX 5080-class performance. These updates aim to enhance accessibility for PC gamers without high-end local hardware.

GeForce Now launched six years ago and continues to expand, allowing users to stream demanding games using powerful RTX hardware in the cloud. This eliminates the need for expensive local setups, enabling play on laptops, tablets, or modest desktops with low-latency streaming.

The anniversary month starts strong with 10 new games added this week, many optimized for RTX 5080 ready performance, which delivers higher frame rates, resolutions, and image quality on supported tiers. Key additions include Delta Force from Team Jade and TiMi Studio Group, featuring extraction modes, combined arms combat with vehicles across large environments, and gadgets for coordinated play. Another highlight is PUBG: Blindspot, a 5v5 top-down tactical shooter from Krafton, emphasizing map knowledge, objectives, and utility in compact rounds.

Other titles joining include Indika on Xbox via Game Pass, Menace on Steam and Xbox (RTX 5080 ready), World of Warcraft: Burning Crusade Classic Anniversary Edition on Battle.net, Carmageddon: Rogue Shift on Steam (RTX 5080 ready), Fallout Shelter on Steam, Little Nightmares Enhanced Edition on Steam and Xbox with Game Pass, Roadcraft on Xbox via Game Pass, and Wildgate on Epic Games Store. HumanitZ on Steam is also RTX 5080 ready.

Throughout February, more games arrive, such as Kingdom Come: Deliverance and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora on Xbox with Game Pass, Ys X: Nordics on Steam, and Trine 3 and 4 on Epic Games Store. January saw 35 additions, including Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 and Half Sword, some RTX 5080 ready. Looking ahead, Nova Roma launches in March on GeForce Now.

These developments underscore cloud gaming's growing role, offering diverse genres from tactical action to RPGs without hardware barriers.

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