GeForce Now, NVIDIA’s cloud gaming service that lets you play new titles over an internet connection, hosts major EA games this week
With NVIDIA, it is also possible to play on devices not engineered to provide super-performance. The GeForce Now catalog is periodically updated with new games, bringing perhaps important works or works every week also come out shortly thereafter: in the next few days, we will be able to try out some EA titles.
The new EA games included in the NVIDIA GeForce Now catalog
This week, the GeForce Now catalog was enriched with classic titles, important works produced by EA and new games released recently. Among the most relevant, in addition to Europa Universalis IV and Splinter Cell Blacklist, there are:
- Battlefield 1: released in 2016, it transports us to the events parallel to the WWI, livable through five mini campaigns set on the different fronts of the conflict.
- Dragon Age Inquisition: last chapter released in the Dragon Age saga, with deeply RPG criteria and with a high possibility of characterization of the story; the final DLC is what though it really does show off the quality of the lore of this series.
- Unravel: platform game with puzzles to “untangle”, taking the role of the protagonist Yarny, a living ball of yarn.
- Mirror’s Edge Catalyst: title received with less enthusiasm by critics, which fascinates for the numerous parkour actions that can be performed in the game world.
Other minor but still interesting titles, in addition to Hot Wheels Unleashed, The Last Friend and Rogue Lords, are:
- Lemnis Gate: peculiar turn-based, strategic shooter on time-loops.
- The Eternal Cylinder: game similar to Spore, where you can change and evolve your Trebhum in a world in ruins.
- INDUSTRY: FPS with singleplayer story that transports us to one Berlino steampunk, before the end of the Cold War.
- Rustler: a “Grand Theft Horse” with a bird’s-eye view, in which to become a god scoundrel cutters within a medieval world.
We remind you that access to new games, including EA ones, which have recently been added to the GeForce Now service, it is not tied to a monthly subscription, but you will have to buy them individually through your account on Steam, Epic Games and Uplay. However, there is a subscription plan for those who want to access the games without having to wait for their turn, which is mandatory for those who sign up for a free profile.
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