GeForce NOW Turns 6 as NVIDIA Confirms 1B Hours Streamed and Adds 24 New Games in February 2026
NVIDIA’s GeForce NOW is officially celebrating its 6th anniversary this month, marking 6 years since the cloud gaming service launched in February 2020. Over that time, GeForce NOW has steadily expanded its supported catalog, improved publisher participation, and continued upgrading its backend to raise the overall bar for cloud delivered PC gaming, including the recent RTX Blackwell era upgrade that strengthens the platform’s performance ceiling for demanding titles.
To anchor the milestone, NVIDIA confirmed that GeForce NOW users have streamed more than 1 billion hours of gameplay to date. That is a major utilization signal for the service, and it lands at a moment when hardware pressure across the PC ecosystem continues to shape how players access games. Cloud streaming remains one of the most direct ways to keep playing at high quality without being blocked by parts availability, pricing spikes, or upgrade delays.
To celebrate the anniversary month, NVIDIA is adding 24 PC games to GeForce NOW’s supported list in February 2026. The rollout begins this week with 10 titles.
This Week on GeForce NOW
The Rest of the February 2026 GeForce NOW Additions
The bigger momentum play is later in the month, with CAPCOM’s Resident Evil: Requiem positioned to become one of the most streamed launches on the service when it arrives in late February. Here is the remaining February list.
NVIDIA also highlighted that the co op isometric open world zombie survival game Humanitz is now GeForce RTX 5080 ready. On top of the February wave, NVIDIA confirmed that Nova Roma, a city building game launching on 2026 03 26, will be streamable via GeForce NOW on day 1, which is an increasingly important benchmark for cloud platforms competing on relevance and release day parity.
For players, the strategic value is clear. A monthly cadence of high profile drops, plus more games being labeled RTX 5080 ready, strengthens GeForce NOW as a practical alternative for anyone who wants premium PC quality without being locked to local hardware refresh cycles. If NVIDIA keeps day 1 availability consistent for major launches, GeForce NOW’s position in the PC gaming stack moves from convenience to a legitimate primary way to play, especially for gamers juggling laptops, older desktops, or travel setups.
Are you using cloud gaming as a temporary bridge until GPU prices stabilize, or has GeForce NOW become your main way to play big releases?
