If you had told me five years ago that playing PC games over the cloud would soon look indistinguishable from using a powerful rig, I would have called you a fool. But after diving into NVIDIA's new RTX 5080-powered GeForce Now servers for several hours, I think we've reached a major milestone for cloud streaming. From a New Jersey server almost a thousand miles away from my Atlanta-area home, I was able to play Cyberpunk 2077 in 4K at 170 fps (with NVIDIA's DLSS 4 frame generation) and Overwatch 2 at a blistering fast 360 fps in 1080p. I genuinely couldn't tell the difference between this souped-up GeForce Now server and my own RTX 5090-powered desktop.
That got me thinking: What's the point of investing thousands in a desktop when cloud streaming can look this good for $20 a month? That's the price for GeForce Now's top-end Ultimate plan, which is required to use the RTX 5080 servers. And if you don't need that level of power, you can also get a pretty solid gaming experience with the $10 Performance plan, which is restricted to 1,440p/60 fps at best.
Cyberpunk 2077 on GeForce Now (Devindra Hardawar for Engadget)
During my testing, I was constantly astounded by how sharp every game looked. The neon lights and reflective surfaces of Cyberpunk's Night City lit up my Alienware OLED monitor. A few minutes into my first session, I completely forgot I was streaming the game. There were none of the video compression artifacts or occasional stuttering I've seen on other streaming services. Hell, I was even able to rip through several Overwatch 2 matches without noticing much lag. I only noticed a bit of latency when I turned on multi-frame generation while playing Cyberpunk in 4K — that pushed my frame rate up to 160 fps from 70 fps, but those interpolated frames made everything feel more sluggish.
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We've clearly come a long way from Microsoft and Sony's foray into game streaming for consoles. I've used Xbox offering on and off over the years, and while it's typically been easy to use, it always felt a bit low-res (it tops out at 1080p/60 fps) and filled with blotchy video compression. Even today, it's obvious you're getting a second-rate experience. Sony's streaming for PS Plus Premium subscribers can now reach up to an admirable 4K/60 fps for some PS5 titles, and it also turned the PlayStation Portal into a more viable handheld. But Sony's cloud gaming seems more useful for letting you play older PS3 games, instead of giving you a complete gaming experience untethered from its core console business.
Overwatch 2 on GeForce Now (Devindra Hardawar for Engadget)
GeForce Now has always had a technological advantage over the competition, as it's easy for NVIDIA to stuff servers full of high-end GPUs. But it's lagged behind a bit when it comes to usability, since playing games involves connecting to your accounts on storefronts like Steam, followed by downloading and installing those titles in a remote connection window. It's not as easy as hitting a button on the Xbox Windows app. GeForce Now is clearly aimed at PC gamers who already have large collections of games and are used to suffering through the indignities of Steam's interface.
For those players, NVIDIA's latest upgrades have turned GeForce Now from a "nice to have" service to something that could be essential. There's the raw power inherent in the leap to RTX 5080-level GPUs, which leads to higher frame rates and the ability to lean into demanding features like ray tracing. The actual "Blackwell" GPU hardware NVIDIA is using in its servers also sports a whopping 48GB of VRAM, a major leap from the 16GB of VRAM the consumer-grade RTX 5080 cards are stuck with. Technically, you could see better performance in GeForce Now compared to running a 5080 locally.
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