NVIDIA Boosts GeForce NOW With GOG Integration and New Features at GDC 2026
NVIDIA bumped GeForce NOW VR streaming from 60 to 90 FPS for Ultimate members starting March 19, and GOG library linking is coming soon.

NVIDIA used its GeForce ON event on the sidelines of GDC 2026 to announce a substantial round of upgrades to its GeForce NOW cloud gaming platform, touching everything from game discovery and account linking to VR streaming performance and library expansion.
The headline technical change for VR players arrives March 19: Ultimate members using supported headsets will see streaming frame rates jump from 60 FPS to 90 FPS. The devices explicitly confirmed across reporting include the Apple Vision Pro, Meta Quest, and Pico. "The higher frame rate enhances smoothness, responsiveness and realism across every session, whether gamers are chasing enemies through neon-lit streets or exploring far-flung alien worlds," NVIDIA said in a statement. The previous 60 FPS cap had been a persistent limitation for cloud VR sessions, and the bump to 90 is meaningful for anything that relies on rotational tracking.
On the account linking side, NVIDIA confirmed GOG integration is coming, with account linking and library syncing described as arriving "in the coming months." That follows Gaijin single sign-on, which NVIDIA had already announced at CES. The more immediate change for current subscribers is a new in-app labeling system for anyone who has already connected their Xbox Game Pass or Ubisoft+ accounts. Labels will appear directly on game art inside the GeForce NOW app, identifying which titles are accessible through an active subscription without requiring players to cross-reference external lists.
The library itself is expanding with several notable titles. Control Resonant, Remedy's action-RPG set in a warped Manhattan, and Samson: A Tyndalston Story, a gritty brawler from Liquid Swords, will both debut on GeForce NOW at PC launch. Tom's Guide's coverage also lists Active Matter, Crimson Desert, and Resident Evil: Requiem among incoming titles, while Neowin noted a separate supported games list update earlier in the week that added Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection and John Carpenter's Toxic Commando.

The Install-to-Play feature is also broadening its Xbox game support. Double Fine Productions' Brutal Legend and Compulsion Games' Contrast were named specifically as titles being added, giving owners the option to download and install those titles rather than purely streaming them.
DLSS 4.5 with Dynamic Multi-Frame Generation was announced separately during NVIDIA's broader GDC showcase, aimed at developers building next-generation titles with AI-accelerated rendering. Further GeForce NOW rollout details for these features will come through NVIDIA's weekly GFN Thursday update cadence, with the 90 FPS VR change representing the only hard calendar date confirmed so far.
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