GeForce NOW Celebrates ARC Raiders Launch With Free Game Offer
- Sagar Mankar
- Nov 2
- 2 min read
ARC Raiders has officially launched on NVIDIA GeForce NOW. The release is being celebrated with a special promotion: anyone who picks up a 12‑month GeForce NOW Ultimate membership will get access to ARC Raiders for free.

So, what exactly are you getting into with ARC Raiders? The game drops you into a retro‑futuristic Earth under siege by mysterious mechanical invaders known as the ARC. It’s a mix of squad‑based strategy and explosive firefights, all wrapped in a striking 1980s sci‑fi aesthetic. You and your squadmates will need to scavenge weapons, improvise tactics, and work together to survive against overwhelming odds. Every encounter feels like a desperate stand, and that’s part of the thrill. On Steam, it's already topped charts with over 260k concurrent players.
On GeForce NOW Ultimate, ARC Raiders streams with RTX 5080‑class power, which means up to 5K resolution, 120 FPS gameplay, and real‑time ray tracing on nearly any device. Whether you’re playing on a high‑end PC, a laptop, or even a mobile device, the cloud handles the heavy lifting. For players like us who don’t always have the latest hardware, that’s a big deal. It’s priced at $199.99 USD for 12 months.
The launch also comes alongside a wave of new titles joining GeForce NOW this week. Highlights include:
The Outer Worlds 2 (new release on Steam, Battle-net, Xbox, also on PC Game Pass)
Guild Wars 2: Visions of Eternity (latest expansion)
Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective (Capcom classic, HD remaster)
Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective – Demo (Steam)
Escape Simulator 2 (new release on Steam, Oct. 27)
Wreckreation (new release on Steam, Oct. 28)
Outbreak Island (new release on Steam, Oct. 28)
Dark Moon (new release on Steam, Oct. 29)
Earth vs. Mars (new release on Steam, Oct. 29)
Keeper (Steam and Xbox, also on PC Game Pass)
NVIDIA isn’t just adding games; it’s also expanding its infrastructure. Sofia, Bulgaria, has already been upgraded to RTX 5080‑class servers, with Amsterdam and Montreal next in line. These rollouts are part of NVIDIA’s ongoing effort to make high‑end cloud gaming more accessible worldwide. Players can even track the rollout progress on NVIDIA’s official server page.




