Building on Nvidia's CES 2026 launch of native GeForce Now apps for Linux (Ubuntu 24.04+) and Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max (2nd gen)—enabling up to 4K ray-traced or 5K/120 FPS cloud gaming—the service now boasts over 25 million members. This expansion targets budget hardware and open-source users, sparking excitement and some compatibility concerns.
Nvidia's GeForce Now, in beta since 2015, streams over 3,000 owned games from Steam, Epic, Ubisoft, and more via RTX-powered servers, with tiers from free to $19.99/month Ultimate (RTX 4080-equivalent). The CES expansions, including flight controller support for Microsoft Flight Simulator and Elite Dangerous, plus auto sign-ins, build on integrations like Xbox Game Pass.
By bringing AAA gaming to $50 Fire TV devices and Linux setups (including Steam Deck communities), Nvidia aims to compete with Xbox Cloud Gaming and Amazon Luna. Technologies like Reflex low-latency and AI upscaling address internet challenges in a market set to boom by 2030.
User reactions on X praise the inclusivity for living rooms and enterprises, especially amid Windows 10's end-of-life, though older device support raises flags. This positions GeForce Now as a leader in democratizing high-end gaming without local powerhouses.