The bulk of people that might find it useful to farm out gaming to a rack of remote servers are those that would be running iGPUs from Intel or possibly AMD, but VRR requires a GeForce dGPU which implies at least some amount of on-premise gaming capacity that makes the feature less relevant.
I don't think so - GeForce Now is cloud-driven, and I guessing the Windows limitation is purely for driver/software stability at the moment. NVIDIA obviously knows how GeForce Now works, and obviously knows best how its own drivers work when VRR is enabled. Now, how soon NVIDIA wants to make sure it works well with AMD's/Intel's drivers, I don't know. But the sooner the better, since I would guess like you said the majority of GeForce Now users are on iGPUs from AMD or Intel.
We’ve updated our terms. By continuing to use the site and/or by logging into your account, you agree to the Site’s updated Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
2 Comments
Back to Article
PeachNCream - Friday, March 8, 2024 - link
The bulk of people that might find it useful to farm out gaming to a rack of remote servers are those that would be running iGPUs from Intel or possibly AMD, but VRR requires a GeForce dGPU which implies at least some amount of on-premise gaming capacity that makes the feature less relevant.NextGen_Gamer - Friday, March 8, 2024 - link
I don't think so - GeForce Now is cloud-driven, and I guessing the Windows limitation is purely for driver/software stability at the moment. NVIDIA obviously knows how GeForce Now works, and obviously knows best how its own drivers work when VRR is enabled. Now, how soon NVIDIA wants to make sure it works well with AMD's/Intel's drivers, I don't know. But the sooner the better, since I would guess like you said the majority of GeForce Now users are on iGPUs from AMD or Intel.