This week, the hit game Genshin Impact also arrived on the service, alongside a few other titles. 4K streaming also expanded to Windows and macOS last month, and fully touch-optimized controls were released for Fortnite to get around mobile app store restrictions. In recent weeks, Nvidia GeForce Now has continued to bolster its catalog of games, now supporting over 1,300 titles on the service, though with a notable loss recently with Sony’s God of War port, but also major additions from EA’s Star Wars catalog. We’d take a guess that Apple’s requirement that GeForce Now uses a web app instead of a native one is the reason this isn’t currently available. We asked Nvidia if support was coming, but the company said that 120fps is only available through the native Android app at this point, so iOS users are excluded for the time being and still limited to 60fps gameplay, even if the device itself has a 120Hz screen. The official list of supported Android devices for 120fps gameplay on GeForce Now is still where you’ll find the most consistent experience, with those devices including: Nvidia says that the expanded support will arrive “over the coming weeks” and that the experience could vary from device to device.
Update 7/21: After a limited rollout back in June, Nvidia has confirmed to 9to5Google that 120fps gameplay is now rolling out widely to all Android smartphones with support for the high refresh rate displays. If your phone has a 120Hz display, you can now stream games at 120fps. It’s that faster refresh rate that’s boosting GeForce Now for Android players this week, with 120fps expanding to all Android phones with faster refresh rates.
While it’s a pricey option, it was quickly found to be the gold standard of cloud gaming thanks to minimal input latency, higher resolution, and faster refresh rate. NVIDIA GeForce NOW has a really simple interface that lets you view your game. By transmitting each game to a compatible device, you can play without needing to find hardware that combines the necessary requirements. Teste den HDR+WCG Image Viewer aus dem Microsoft Store, um HDR-Screenshots genau anzuzeigen. Mit Alt+F1 kannst du deinen HDR-Screenshot im JXR-Format speichern, während du auf deinem HDR-Monitor spielst. Last year, the service picked up its RTX 3080 tier, which offers the power of the still-hard-to-find graphics card, but through the cloud. NVIDIA GeForce NOW is a service developed by the NVIDIA company that lets you enjoy your favorite games online. GeForce Experience bietet Unterstützung für schnelle HDR-Screenshot-Aufzeichnungen für über 300 Ansel -unterstützte Spiele. The service is free, but you can pay to get longer sessions and better quality. It’s a great way to expand the gaming experience on your PC over to a mobile phone or your TV, or just to play games that your PC isn’t powerful enough to run on its own.
GeForce Now is a cloud gaming service that allows players to stream PC games from marketplaces such as Steam and the Epic Games Store, among others, to virtually any device.
Did you ever try the Win 8 drivers from bobkn for the NVIDIA GeForce 6150SE? I hope your luck still holds.Nvidia has just announced that GeForce Now is picking up support for 120fps gameplay on all Android smartphones, after previously limiting the functionality to only a few select models. You are the only member of the Forum who has reported any success. I have a small profile Acer Aspire AX1420G-U5832.
I'm just beginning to wrestle with the upgrade from Windows 7, 64 bit to Windows 10. Similar things happened with past OS changes (Windows 98 to XP, XP to 7).
(The manufacturers make no income by producing updated drivers.) "Old" may not be very old at all.
While they may support their OS for many years, driver support for old hardware can be limited. Microsoft doesn't write drivers for most third-party hardware. The Microsoft Basic Display Adapter drivers are generic ones from Microsoft. I have no idea whether these will help, but they supposedly support the 6150SE on Windows 8. I assume that you're running 32 bit Windows 10. I will make a ISO and after that, give it a go.
Thanks for the links, Not tried those yet, but I'm not too keen on trying again after the last one borked my network drivers.