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GeForce NOW Adds 007 First Light, World of Tanks: HEAT, and More New Games This Week

GeForce NOW Adds 007 First Light, World of Tanks: HEAT, and More New Games This Week
Aman May 29, 2026 Games

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Nvidia has released a fresh update for its GeForce NOW cloud gaming service, adding support for several new games. The final GeForce NOW update for May brings seven games and one demo across Steam, Epic Games Store, Xbox, and Microsoft Store platforms.

Some of the biggest additions this week include 007 First Light, World of Tanks: HEAT, Starminer, and the Resident Evil Requiem Demo.

The highlight of the update is 007 First Light, the upcoming James Bond game being developed by IO Interactive. Nvidia is currently promoting the game through a special GeForce NOW Ultimate bundle offer. Users who purchase a 12-month GeForce NOW Ultimate subscription for a limited time will receive the game as a Steam key once it launches. Ultimate subscribers also get access to an exclusive in-game cosmetic called the Dare Elite Outfit.

Nvidia says Ultimate members can stream games using GeForce RTX 50-series GPU power in the cloud with support for up to 5K HDR streaming quality. The company is heavily pushing the idea that players can enjoy high-end gaming experiences across devices without needing an expensive gaming PC.

Here are all the games joining GeForce NOW this week:

  • Romestead (Steam)
  • World of Tanks: HEAT (Steam)
  • 007 First Light (Steam, Epic Games Store, Xbox via Microsoft Store)
  • Starminer (Steam)
  • Resident Evil Requiem Demo (Steam)
  • Alchemy Factory (Steam)
  • BeamNG.drive (Epic Games Store)
  • Ostranauts (Steam)

One important thing to remember is that GeForce NOW does not work like Xbox Game Pass or EA Play. Subscribers still need to own the games they want to stream, unless the title is included through PC Game Pass licensing. The service basically allows users to stream their existing PC game library from Nvidia’s cloud servers.

GeForce NOW has continued expanding rapidly over the past few years as cloud gaming slowly becomes more mainstream. Services like this are especially useful for players with older laptops, Macs, handheld devices, or weaker gaming PCs that cannot run modern titles properly.

At the same time, Nvidia is also trying to make GeForce NOW more attractive with exclusive bundles and early support for new games. Adding a major upcoming title like 007 First Light is another sign that publishers are becoming more comfortable with cloud gaming platforms.

However, GeForce NOW still has some limitations compared to traditional gaming subscriptions. Users must buy most games separately, and the service also comes with monthly playtime limits depending on the subscription tier. Even so, for many players, cloud gaming is becoming a practical way to access high-end PC gaming without spending thousands on hardware.

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Aman

About the Author: Aman

Aman is an Engineering student who specializes in high-performance gaming systems. Having started his journey in the PC ecosystem at age five, he has spent over two decades analyzing the intersection of software optimization and hardware architecture. He keeps a close eye in gaming world and brings all the latest updates that matter to gamers.

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