this post was submitted on 24 Dec 2025
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NVIDIA has announced that starting January 1, 2026, each GeForce NOW cloud gaming subscription will be limited to 100 hours of play time per month. The company is implementing its long-lasting promise revealed in 2024, with the option for users to purchase additional play time as needed. Under the standard Performance tier, which costs $9.99 per month, after the 100-hour play time is reached, users can buy extra 15-hour blocks for $2.99 each. For the Ultimate tier, priced at $19.99 per month, additional 15-hour blocks are available for $5.99 each.

Since months are averaged to about 30.437 days, any play time exceeding the 100-hour limit is rounded up to the next 15-hour block, potentially leading to extra charge if someone wants more play time. For instance, playing around three hours per day (approximately 91 hours per month) remains within the base fee, but playing four hours daily (about 122 hours per month) results in extra costs of approximately $15.97 on the Performance tier or $31.97 on the Ultimate tier.

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[–] webkitten@piefed.social 10 points 1 week ago (6 children)

What is a GeForce Now Subscription and why would you want a subscription to your graphic card? 🤔

[–] Joelk111@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago

It's game streaming, except you stream an entire PC.

[–] CaptPretentious@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

It's the same grift that every cloud provider does. The "You'll save money because you'll eliminate CapEx and only have OpEx instead of both!" And then they present you with numbers that look reasonable, hoping you don't do the math.

CapEx - Capital expenditure = the cost of buying the things (ownership)

OpEx - Operating expenses = cost to run things

So, yeah, you don't have to buy their overpriced $2000 GPU... you could just rent it! But renting it means you never own it, and the contract will state that the SLA will change. So they get you to sign up and then the prices change. And when your money is being dumped into the monthly bill, you are now constantly short what you'd need to buy the hardware and get yourself out of that hell. Ask anyone who's accidentally left something running in AWS and got a MASSIVE bill. Or made an API but didn't put rate limiting on it.

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[–] Enzy@feddit.nu 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Get Boosteroid instead, even has a winter deal on price at the moment.

[–] Boiglenoight@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

I can’t recall why, but I was tired of 3DFX. I think they had a monopoly on 3D acceleration or something, and at the time OpenGL seemed like the way to go. An unknown company called Nvidia released a card called the Riva TNT and it contributed to OpenGL becoming widely supported as well as ending 3DFX’s once deserved dominance.

Nvidia kept hitting it out of the park, creating iterations of cards that made it worthwhile to upgrade every several years. I think the competition from ATI (now AMD) may have kept them from falling into the same rut as 3DFX, and as gamers we’ve enjoyed the result of that relationship with good cards from both.

Today…Nvidia has grown into something that had shed its reason for being. It’s crazy to see their logo in business news top stories. What they’re doing, contributing to a tech development that is so far out front of government oversight that could protect people from the consequences, I see them more as a threat to society than anything else. It’s crazy.

[–] Manjushri@piefed.social 2 points 1 week ago (6 children)

Forgive my ignorance, but does this mean that my gforce card performance will be degraded if I don't pay for this subscription? Why would I want to use this cloud gaming to play games I already own?

[–] TheOakTree@lemmy.zip 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Because some people have digital libraries but no hardware to run them on.

At the very least, this is a loss in gaming accessibility by cost since a month of GeForce Now used to be a decent gaming backup for when mygaming system was down (had to RMA GPU) or a friend wanted to test the PC gaming waters.

[–] Manjushri@piefed.social 2 points 1 week ago

That makes sense. Thanks for the explanation.

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