Forza Horizon 6 brings open-world racing to the cloud
Nvidia’s newest update adds Forza Horizon 6 to the growing slate of GeForce Now games, instantly strengthening the platform’s AAA racing line-up. Available via Steam and Xbox with full Game Pass streaming support, the racer “brings the Horizon Festival to the cloud,” as Nvidia describes it, letting subscribers jump into its open-world driving and car culture without a high-end rig. That means the series’ trademark mix of road trips, live events, and laid-back exploration can now be streamed across supported devices through the cloud gaming service. Forza’s arrival is a strategic win: racing games are often used as visual showcases, and placing a major next entry in the franchise on GeForce Now signals Nvidia’s intent to position the service as a first-stop home for big-budget, graphics-intensive releases rather than a late-arriving alternative.

Zero Parades and Luna Abyss spotlight GeForce Now’s indie edge
Alongside the marquee racing launch, Nvidia is leaning into narrative-driven and experimental titles. Zero Parades: For Dead Spies, from Disco Elysium studio ZA/UM, is now streamable on GeForce Now after its Steam debut. Billed as an espionage RPG about a brilliant but tormented operative on a last-ditch mission, it carries the dense writing and psychological focus that made Disco Elysium stand out, while exploring a distinct universe and spy thriller tone. The lineup also includes Luna Abyss, a new action-adventure available via Steam and Xbox with Game Pass streaming integration. Together, these releases highlight how GeForce Now is becoming a home not just for visual showpieces, but also for text-heavy, offbeat experiences that traditionally lived on local PCs. The service is quietly amassing a catalog where prestige indies can sit alongside blockbuster franchises.

007 First Light gets double Nvidia promotion
Nvidia is backing upcoming James Bond game 007 First Light with an unusually heavy promotional push tied directly to its cloud ecosystem. The title is already included in an RTX 50 series bundle, and now it’s being offered at no extra cost to new customers who pick up a 12‑month GeForce Now Ultimate membership before June 10. That means early adopters of Nvidia’s high-end graphics hardware or its top-tier streaming subscription are being funneled toward the same flagship release, reinforcing the idea that premium Bond adventures belong in Nvidia’s ecosystem. By attaching a much-anticipated spy game to GeForce Now Ultimate, Nvidia is treating cloud access as a value-add equivalent to owning powerful local hardware, rather than a budget compromise. It’s a clear signal that headline games and promotional tie-ins will increasingly run through the cloud service’s highest tier.
Game Pass support and a broader library power GeForce Now’s appeal
The current update adds breadth as well as big names. Deep Rock Galactic: Rogue Core, Warhammer 40,000: Mechanicus II, Sunderfolk, Splitgate Arena Reloaded, and TerraTech Legion all join the roster, extending support across Steam, Epic Games Store, and Xbox. Several of these, including TerraTech Legion, Luna Abyss, and Splitgate Arena Reloaded, are playable via Game Pass streaming, reinforcing GeForce Now’s role as a flexible hub rather than a closed ecosystem. By letting players tap into existing libraries and subscriptions through a cloud gaming service, Nvidia lowers the barrier to trying premium titles, especially for those without modern gaming PCs. Forza Horizon 6 acts as the visual powerhouse, while Game Pass-supported additions and experimental RPGs like Zero Parades deepen the catalog. The strategy is clear: make GeForce Now the easiest way to access a wide range of high-quality games, no hardware upgrade required.
