NVIDIA Food for Thought — New Games and Boosts to GeForce NOW
So, NVIDIA’s rolling out a pretty hefty lineup of new titles and some interesting tech perks for GeForce NOW. Among the fresh arrivals, you’ve got Dune Awakening from Funcom, Remedy’s FBC: Firebreak, Build A Rocket Boy’s MindsEye, and Sloclap’s Rematch. All of these are going live for streaming at launch — meaning no waiting, no downloads. That’s a nice boost, especially for those who rely on cloud gaming to skip the hardware grind.
Playing with Ray Tracing and Frame Boosts
Dune Awakening is supporting NVIDIA’s DLSS 4 and Reflex — so Premium and Ultra subscribers can turn on DLSS Super Resolution and Reflex for smoother gameplay. But here’s the kicker: GFN Ultimate subscribers can also activate DLSS Frame Generation, which is supposed to crank up frame rates even more. It’s an interesting little perk, especially if you’re chasing that buttery-smooth experience. Rematch and FBC share the same tech support, with FBC standing out because it supports full-on path tracing, adding to the visual fidelity challenge. Because of course it is.
This Week’s Additions: A Taste of the New
Nvidia’s list of new titles for this week looks fairly diverse. There’s Symphonia, hitting Xbox first — available on PC Game Pass — just on June 3. Then right after, a flurry of titles on Steam including Pro Cycling Manager 25 and Tour de France 2025. Also, Dune: Awakening – Advanced Access arrives on June 5, immediately making the list look rather competitive.
Other titles like Police Simulator: Patrol Officers (on Xbox, also on PC Game Pass) and Sea of Thieves on Battle.net pop up as well, giving variety for different gaming tastes.
Full June Lineup — Because NVIDIA’s Planning Ahead
If those titles are just a teaser, NVIDIA has a bigger schedule for June. The list includes upcoming drops like Dune: Awakening and MindsEye on June 10. Nodes like The Alters and Architect Life: A House Design Simulator are coming mid-month, on the 13th and 19th respectively.
A handful of familiar classics are also making a comeback — like Borderlands Game of the Year Enhanced on Steam and Borderlands 2. Some of these will be part of the ongoing PC Game Pass rotation, which makes sense given the subscription’s focus on value.
Overall, this shows NVIDIA isn’t just bluffing about expanding their library — they’re also pushing Nvidia-specific tech features that could give the service a slight edge. Still, whether Frame Generation makes a huge difference, or just looks better in trailers, remains to be seen. But hey, it’s good to have more options, and especially now, when streaming feels like the best way to game without crashing your GPU for every new shiny thing.