Of course, you’ll need to be in a region where GeForce Now is available. It is worth noting Microsoft Edge isn’t currently supported, even though it’s a Chromium browser now.
You can play with a mouse and keyboard, a gamepad, even a wireless headset - all of them worked for us seamlessly in Chrome. Like Google Stadia and Amazon Luna, GeForce Now is essentially a PC in the cloud that you “rent” to stream your games. Nvidia’s changelog also lists a few other changes to make the service more useful in a browser, like the ability to create dedicated shortcuts for your games and a new way to share links that can send your friend directly to a game. Or, if you’re on a new M1 Mac, according to release notes for this new version of GeForce Now, through a new dedicated application. Now, theoretically anyone with a Chrome browser can start streaming by heading GeForce Now’s site and creating an account, even on a weak laptop.
GEFORCE NOW DOWNLOAD MAC FOR WINDOWS 10
GeForce Now already had applications for Windows 10 and Android devices, but expanded to an even wider audience with a beta launch for Chromebooks in August of 2020, and followed it up by beating Stadia to iOS devices with a web app workaround that lets you stream games through the Safari web browser there. We just tested out the Chrome browser version on a Mac and a Windows 10 PC, and it seems to be running smoothly. Nvidia’s GeForce Now game streaming service has launched for the Chrome web browser and M1 Macs in beta (via XDA-Developers), bringing resource intensive games to laptops and other devices that might not have been powerful to run them on their own.