Square Enix was one of the publishers originally on board with Nvidia’s GeForce Now streaming service before its launch. When the time came for the service to switch from beta to full release, Square Enix pulled all of its games and left the company in the dust. It was a similar story to other publishers in that Square Enix “misunderstood” how the free trial of the service worked. Regardless of what the reason was, the company is now returning to Nvidia’s platform after its short absence.

The Japanese company announced today that a slew of its titles would be available at 2:00 pm EST on Nvidia’s interesting cloud streaming solution. Games like Tomb Raider, Deus Ex: Mankind Divided, and Just Cause 3 are among the titles you can stream if you own them via Steam. There’s a curious absence of Final Fantasy games, but those will likely be added in the future.

Here is the full list of everything that has returned to the platform:

  • BATTALION 1944 Boundless Deus Ex: Human Revolution - Director’s Cut Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Just Cause 3 Just Cause 4 Life is Strange Life is Strange 2 Rise of the Tomb Raider: 20 Year Celebration Shadow of the Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition Sleeping Dogs: Definitive Edition Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance The Awesome Adventures of Captain Spirit Tomb Raider

In addition to the Square Enix games, a few other titles from the likes of SNK and Hi-Rez Studios were added. These include:

  • Hardspace: Shipbreaker Automation Paladins Power of Seasons Samurai Shodown NEOGEO Collection Satisfactory SMITE

You’d think more publishers would be on board with letting Nvidia stream games considering players will need to legally own them from services like Steam, Epic Games Store, and GOG. For whatever reason, some publishers aren’t happy about the terms Nvidia has in place. I guess there’s something about control of where games are and how players interact with them.

If we could get over hurdles like that, GeForce Now would be the defacto standard for streaming services. Google made a tremendous push with Stadia, but that service is still not ready for primetime. It also demands you buy an immaterial version of a game that may eventually be pulled, which sucks.

Source: Nvidia

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