"The Free tier is limited to one hour, Priority subscribers can play for up to six hours per session, and Ultimate subscribers get eight hour sessions. There is no set limit to the number of sessions you can start in a day. The free tier also doesn’t feature “RTX On,” Nvidia’s term for ray-tracing and DLSS support.
There’s a priority component to the tiers, too, as Nvidia places limitations on the overall process and user loads on GeForce Now’s regional data centers. Free members have the lowest priority in connecting to the service, which can mean waiting in line to connect to a rig at times. Priority and Ultimate have priority access to the queue, with Ultimate members getting access to systems that provide up to RTX 4080 GPUs (where available, as this support is rolling out in phases).
Beyond those varied limitations, GeForce Now advertises up to 1080p at 60 frames-per-second gameplay for its Priority members, and up to 4K at 120fps for PC/Mac and 4K HDR on Shield TV for its RTX 4080 members.
In the United States, where this review was done, the membership plans cost the following:
Free
Priority: $9.99/month or $49.99/6 months
Ultimate: $19.99/month or $99.99/6 months"
Above information from PCW
GeForce Now review: You bring the games, Nvidia streams the hardware | PCWorld
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GeForce Now offers a solid game streaming experience you can try yourself with the free plan; you just have to own your own games or...