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Nvidia’s GeForce Now adds native support for M1 Macs

Following the launch of Fortnite for iOS and iPadOS earlier this year, Nvidia’s online gaming service GeForce Now now includes native support for Macs with M1 processors. Nvidia modified the most recent version of the GeForce Now program for macOS. The specifics are as follows.

Nvidia GeForce Now Supported on M1 Macs

Nvidia has announced the availability of the newest version (2.0.40) to its GeForce Now online gaming service. Apart from adding Amazon’s famous Lost Ark title, the update also adds native support for Apple’s M1-based Mac devices, including MacBooks, iMacs, Mac minis, and Mac Studios.

Nvidia’s GeForce Now adds native support for M1 Macs

The firm noted that the GeForce Now software for macOS will now be able to give an increased performance while consuming less power on PCs powered by the M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max, and M1 Ultra. These include the M1 Pro and M1 Max MacBooks from last year, the 2021 iMac, and the newest Mac Studio.

“This update optimizes power consumption, app launch times, and the overall GeForce NOW experience for MacBooks, iMacs, and Mac Minis with M1 processors,” the firm noted in a blog post.

The update includes a new “Genre” link at the bottom of the Games menu, allowing gamers to quickly browse across games classified as specific genres.

According to Nvidia, this will assist gamers in discovering new games to play on the cloud-gaming platform. Additionally, the update adds a new Streaming Statistics Overlay that displays server-side rendering frame rates.

Apart from these, the current 2.0.40 update for the GFN platform adds the free-to-play action RPG title Lost Ark to practically all devices.

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While Amazon does not officially support macOS, GFN members may now play the title on Mac devices. Additionally, the firm expanded its game portfolio with the addition of God of War and Dune: Spice Wars.

What are your thoughts on Nvidia’s GeForce Now app’s latest additions? Leave your opinions in the comments section below, and stay tuned for further information about Nvidia’s GFN platform.

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