NVIDIA has started April with a strong update for GeForce NOW, adding several new games to its cloud streaming library while also confirming a steady rollout of more titles throughout the month, and this update brings a mix of big-budget releases, indie highlights, and returning franchises that expand what players can stream across devices.
NVIDIA confirmed that the April lineup includes Capcom’s upcoming sci-fi RPG PRAGMATA, alongside titles like Replaced, Samson, and Vampire Crawlers, and these additions continue the company’s push to keep its cloud service aligned with new game launches across Steam, Xbox, and Game Pass.
New games available this week on GeForce NOW
This week’s update brings a dozen games that users can start streaming right away, covering different genres and play styles.
- Hozy
- Cooking Simulator 2: Better Together
- Legacy of Kain: Ascendance
- Subliminal
- Super Meat Boy 3D
- I Am Jesus Christ
- ALL WILL FALL (RTX 5080-ready)
- Arknights: Endfield
- Mega Man Star Force Legacy Collection
- Nova Roma
- RuneScape: Dragonwilds
- Way of the Hunter 2 (RTX 5080-ready)
Among these, Arknights: Endfield stands out as a full 3D real-time strategy RPG with base building and squad-based combat, while Mega Man Star Force Legacy Collection brings multiple classic titles into one package for streaming.
Games coming later in April
NVIDIA also confirmed a steady rollout of additional games across April, with several high-profile releases scheduled across different dates.
- Samson – April 8
- Replaced – April 14
- Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss – April 16
- PRAGMATA – April 17
- Vampire Crawlers: The Turbo Wildcard – April 21
- Outbound – April 23
- Heroes of Might and Magic: Olden Era – April 30
- Bus Bound – April 30
This lineup shows a clear focus on mixing new indie launches with larger, highly anticipated titles that users can stream as soon as they release.
Changes to free tier access
NVIDIA has also updated access rules for some popular games, and Cyberpunk 2077, Forza Motorsport, Icarus, and Ark: Survival Ascended are no longer available on the free tier, which means only paid subscribers can stream these titles going forward.
The company says the change comes from updated system requirements, as the hardware assigned to free-tier users no longer meets the performance standards needed to run these games properly.
GeForce NOW still works differently from subscription libraries like Game Pass, since users must own the game or have a valid license before streaming it through NVIDIA’s cloud servers, and there are also monthly playtime limits depending on the subscription tier.
With April’s lineup now rolling out, NVIDIA continues to position GeForce NOW as a flexible way to play new and demanding games without relying on local hardware, especially for users who want high-end performance across multiple devices.