A number of hours in the past, NVIDIA introduced that Alan Wake 2 has been added to the GeForce NOW cloud library. The sport was conspicuously absent from the GFN Thursday listing, main us to imagine in a delay in its availability on the cloud platform. It seems NVIDIA managed so as to add it on its launch day in spite of everything, if simply barely. The cloud possibility is definitely welcome, given the excessive system necessities.
Nonetheless, NVIDIA warned customers that they may be greeted with a couple of error messages upon launching the sport. For instance, the sport may inform them their GPU drivers are outdated or that they want at the least 16GB RAM to run Alan Wake 2. Within the first occasion, they’ll simply press OK and proceed enjoying usually; within the latter case, they’re going to solely get the choice to stop, although the message ought to solely present up the primary time the sport is launched. Subsequent makes an attempt to run Alan Wake 2 should not be impacted.
Lastly, customers could randomly get a warning that the sport is put in on a Arduous Disk Drive (HDD). That is incorrect, NVIDIA defined:
All GeForce NOW knowledge facilities use Strong State Drives (SSD). Resulting from how this recreation detects storage on GeForce NOW, this message will likely be seen on periods linked to a GeForce RTX 2080 cloud gaming rig. For now, members can press OK to dismiss the message. We’re working with the developer to take away this inaccurate message sooner or later.
Alan Wake 2 launched to important acclaim. Wccftech’s Francesco De Meo rated it 9 out of 10, calling it Treatment’s finest title to this point and among the best survival horror video games ever made.
On GeForce NOW, customers can make the most of the sport’s cutting-edge options like path tracing and DLSS 3.5 (Tremendous Decision, Body Technology, and Ray Reconstruction), supplied they’re subscribed to the Final tier. The RTX 4080-class GPU put in in GFN servers ought to run Alan Wake 2 at round 100 frames per second, in line with NVIDIA.
For an evaluation of the efficiency on PC, try Hassan’s article.
