Nvidia has opened its GeForce Now cloud gaming platform to all users in India as of July 15, ending a three-month beta that limited access via a waitlist. Anyone can now sign up and start streaming PC games without owning a high-end gaming machine.
The Nvidia GeForce Now runs games on Nvidia’s remote servers and streams the gameplay to any device, laptop, smart TV, phone, or a modest PC, letting users skip the cost of expensive hardware altogether.
For now, there are two monthly plans available. The Performance tier, which costs Rs 999 a month, is suited to users who game at 1080p and want smooth, RTX-powered streaming at 600 fps. The Ultimate tier, priced at Rs 1,999 a month, targets serious gamers with support for up to 5K resolution at 120fps, DLSS 4 with Multi-Frame Generation, and Nvidia Reflex for lower input lag. Both plans carry a 100-hour monthly play cap.
Users wanting a trial run can buy day passes instead: Rs 399 for Performance and Rs 799 for Ultimate. Nvidia has also added UPI payment support for easier checkout, and early beta users will get a one-time 20 per cent discount on their first three months of a recurring membership once their current pass expires, with redemption details sent via email.
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This marks a shift from April’s public beta, which offered only 90-day passes. With monthly billing now live, Nvidia is clearly positioning GeForce Now for sustained, everyday use rather than short-term trials, a notable option for Indian gamers looking to avoid the high upfront cost of a gaming PC.





















