The Call of Duty series has arrived on Nvidia GeForce Now, fulfilling a previous promise made by Microsoft.
Microsoft announced a 10-year partnership with Nvidia in February that would bring Xbox PC games to GeForce Now.
The deal also included a promise that Activision Blizzard games like Call of Duty would also be released on Nvidia’s cloud gaming service, should Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard be completed.
Although Microsoft later announced that it would be selling the cloud streaming rights for Activision Blizzard games to Ubisoft should the acquisition be completed, it said its existing agreements with streaming services like Nvidia GeForce Now would still be honoured.
GeForce Now got its first Xbox games in August, fulfilling the first part of the deal.
And now that Microsoft has completed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard, the second part has now been fulfilled.
Notice: To display this embed please allow the use of Functional Cookies in Cookie Preferences.
Call of Duty HQ has been added to the service today, incorporating Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 and Call of Duty: Warzone.
GeForce Now subscribers will be able to launch them from any supported device, as long as they’ve bought them on Steam.
The Call of Duty games are among 15 new cloud titles being added to GeForce Now this week, including Xbox titles like SteamWorld Build, Pillars of Eternity and Research and Destroy.
55 more games will be added to the service in December, 34 of which are Xbox titles. These include Age of Wonders 4, Control, Disgaea 4 Complete+, Human Fall Flat, The Medium and Sable.
Read more on videogameschronicle.com