Nvidia GeForce Now Coming to India This November

Nvidia has confirmed that it will bring its cloud gaming service, GeForce Now, to India in November. It's not clear yet the release date, nor the price, but this news is part of the company's new global updates.

Nvidia GeForce Now Coming to India This November
By Olivia Davis   |   Aug 22, 2025
Expansion into India
India is the second location to offer GeForce Now support after the service became available in Thailand. Service will bring high-quality cloud gaming to gamers - without needing high-end gaming hardware. They were talking about it in 2025. Five years ago, Yamaha and Nvidia announced that they would be building Japan's first business data centre using the GeForce RTX 4080. This will help the burgeoning gaming market in India and introduce players to advanced streaming technology.

Nvidia said Indian gamers can expect the Ultimate memberships, in addition to new titles and features announced earlier this year. Unlike some other areas where local companies maintain servers, Nvidia will itself run its data centre in India as it does in North America and Western Europe.

Subscription Options and Features
GeForce Now will debut with three tiers of subscription service. The Ultimate package has minimum wait times and 100 hours of play a month, you can play for up to 8 hours per session, and you can stream at up to 4k with 240fps. Performance tier provides up to 1440p at 60fps. The Free tier, meanwhile, features ads, one-hour sessions, and 1080p 60fps streaming.

Ahead of Gamescom, Nvidia also revealed RTX 5080-powered upgrades for the new Blackwell SuperPOD servers. This includes the ability to stream in up to 5K resolution and 120fps, but it's not confirmed whether India will receive this at launch.

Games Coming to GeForce Now
Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, Borderlands 4, Arc Raiders, The Outer Worlds 2, Dying Light: The Beast and Hell of Us are only a few of the big titles that will be available on GeForce Now in India. There's also a new "Install to Play" feature that will allow customers to install games directly in the cloud, offering quicker access to Steam's full library to paid members. Including these games, the service's total catalogue has grown to about 4,500 games, making it one of the largest in the industry.
 
T&T