A couple of years after its debut, Nvidia GeForce Now is finally expanding its streaming options on PC and Mac. Starting today, GeForce Now supports 4K streaming on Windows and macOS.

Rolling out now through the Windows and macOS apps for GeForce Now, the cloud gaming service can stream games at up to 4k60, as long as your display can handle that quality and refresh rate. This only works through the native apps, though, not the browser client. Games can also be played at 120fps, but only at 1440p.

Of course, Nvidia GeForce Now’s RTX 3080 tier is required to stream games in 4K. Support for 4K first debuted alongside that stronger streaming tier last year exclusively on the Shield TV. Prior to this update, streaming on PC and macOS was capped at 1440p.

Nvidia touts that DLSS and the powerful hardware behind GeForce Now make this upgraded resolution possible.

This is a notable achievement for Nvidia as well, with GeForce Now being one of the only cloud gaming services that supports 4K streaming on a variety of devices.

4K streaming gets a boost by NVIDIA DLSS, groundbreaking AI rendering technology that increases graphics performance using dedicated Tensor Core AI processors on RTX GPUs. DLSS taps into the power of a deep learning neural network to boost frame rates and generate beautiful, sharp images for games.

More on GeForce Now:

  • GeForce Now takes a page from Stadia’s playbook, adds free game demos for members
  • Google Stadia and Nvidia GeForce Now are coming to Samsung’s 2022 smart TVs ‘later this year’ [U]
  • Nvidia GeForce Now app adds native support for Apple M1 Macs just in time for Lost Ark arrival

Article has been updated to correct details regarding frame rates.

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