

(Check out the full list of supported GeForce Now devices here (Opens in a new window). Now it's expanding to Chrome and Apple Macs that run its new M1 chips. Support arrived on Chromebooks in August and on iOS in November. (Check the list of supported games (Opens in a new window).)Īt launch, gamers could play via a GeForce Now app on PC, Mac, and Android. It ties into your Steam,, Epic, and UPlay accounts to let you play many of the games you already own.

GeForce Now is similar to game-streaming rivals like Google Stadia and Amazon Luna-"a flexible and friendly service for playing PC games you already own on your non-gaming-PC devices," we found in our review. Just point your Chrome browser to (Opens in a new window) to get started!" "Other platforms may work, but are unsupported. "In 2.0.27 we are adding beta support for the Google Chrome browser, which will enable millions more prospective new PC gamers to easily play the latest games on Windows and macOS," Nvidia says in its release notes (Opens in a new window). All you should need is a PC with Chrome or a dedicated app on an M1 Mac laptop. Nvidia is bringing a beta version of its GeForce Now game-streaming service to Google Chrome and M1 Macs.Īccording to XDA-Developers (Opens in a new window), the service is available for testing now.

