Google's latest swing at Chromebook gaming is a free year of GeForce Now
Briefly

Google's latest swing at Chromebook gaming is a free year of GeForce Now
"On the flip side, Fast Pass limits you to a mere 10 hours of game streaming per month. Up to five of those hours can roll over to the next month if unused. Nvidia's free GFN has a session limit of one hour, but it sounds like that is not the case for Fast Pass-we've asked Google to clarify and will report back."
"According to Google, GeForce Now Fast Pass allows users to stream more than 2,000 PC games, but that buries the lede a bit. That's the total number of games that are supported in GeForce Now's free tier-the so-called "read-to-play" catalog. The paid tiers support about twice as many games as "install-to-play," which allows you to install additional games on the remote server to play them."
Fast Pass imposes a 10-hour monthly streaming limit with up to five unused hours rolling over to the next month. The free GeForce Now tier enforces a one-hour session cap, while Fast Pass session-length rules remain unspecified. Fast Pass enables streaming of more than 2,000 supported PC titles within GeForce Now's catalog, and paid tiers expand availability via an install-to-play option that lets users install games on remote servers. Fast Pass does not include game ownership; users must link Steam, Epic, or Xbox accounts to stream titles they own. The availability or pricing after the free year is not confirmed.
Read at Ars Technica
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