If you missed playing Fortnite on Taro Kai Archivesthe iPhone, there’s good news: Nvidia is working on a way to bring the game back to iOS.
The company will offer Fortnite on iOS through Nvidia’s game streaming service GeForce Now, which can operate via the Safari browser. “Starting next week, Fortnite on GeForce Now will launch in a limited-time closed beta for mobile,” Nvidia announced in a Thursday blog post.
In 2020, Apple pulled Fortnite from the iOS App Store after its developer, Epic Games, broke the rules by adding a direct payment option inside the multiplayer title. The kerfuffle sparked an antitrust battle in the courts, which has thus far largely ruled in favor for Apple, although the case is still going through the appeals process.
In the meantime, Apple has denied an Epic Games's attempt to reinstate Fortnite in the App Store. As a result, users who previously had Fortnite installed on their iPhones have been unable to receive game updates for the past 16 months.
However, it seems Epic Games has now found another a way to bring back the multiplayer title to iOS through GeForce Now, which uses the cloud to stream games to iOS' Safari browser.
The Fornite version available to play on iOS will also include touch controls. Interested GeForce Now users can apply for the closed beta through a waitlist. “Members will be admitted to the beta in batches over the coming weeks,” the company added.
The beta hopes to test Nvidia's server capacity, graphics delivery, along with the game’s touch controls. Participating GeForce Now members will also be able to stream the game on Android devices. But unlike iOS, Fortnite is still available on Android through app side-loading.
In the future, Nvidia plans on enabling other touch control-friendly games through GeForce Now, which has mainly been targeting laptop and desktop users.
“While PC games in the GeForce Now library are best experienced on mobile with a gamepad, the introduction of touch controls built by the GeForce Now team offers more options for players, starting with Fortnite,” Nvidia said.
GeForce Now has a free membership, but the experience caps your cloud gaming sessions to one hour before you have to sign off and rejoin a server. A paid membership, which starts at $9.99 a month, gives you longer gameplay sessions and better graphics quality. An internet speed of at least 15Mbps is also required to run GeForce Now.
Topics Gaming
Tesla owners get free supercharging for the holidaysWhether you're over NFTs or not, here's what the future has in store for nonTom Holland, purest boy in world, found a stray dog and took it to the vetIf you find an unwanted AirTag, here's how to disable itTinder user got creative, sent match a thrilling interactive storyColin the Caterpillar crashed Prince Harry's stag do and the photos are frankly outrageousAll the Facebook apps are now officially made by 'Meta Platforms'Signs you're codependent with the Mueller investigationRihanna dons glittering Pope getWaze adds EV charging station locations to its driving mapSigns you're codependent with the Mueller investigation"The Witcher" Season 2 review: Geralt is back and he's dad nowAriana Grande loves Jupiter, and so should youMan reunites with stolen dog after emailing Amazon CEO Jeff BezosThe Center for Disease Control really wants to ruin poppy seed muffins for youPredictably, Trump appoints Dr. Oz to be a government health advisor"The Witcher" Season 2 review: Geralt is back and he's dad nowSigns you're codependent with the Mueller investigationPosting a photo to multiple Instagram accounts is easyWatch an inspiring speech from Jay The Art of Distance No. 26 by The Paris Review Redux: A Ball of Waxy Light by The Paris Review Notes on Notes by Mary Cappello Six Young Women with Prize Staff Picks: Witches, Glitches, and Governesses by The Paris Review All the Better to Hear You With by Sabrina Orah Mark Joan Nelson’s Landscapes by The Paris Review Male Interiority: An Interview with Emma Cline by Annabel Graham Staff Picks: Boats, Brands, and Blasphemy by The Paris Review Painting with a Moth’s Wing by The Paris Review The Death of Max Jacob by Rosanna Warren Something to Hold On To: An Interview with Rumaan Alam by Cornelia Channing The Legacy of Audre Lorde by Roxane Gay How to Read the Air by Anna Badkhen Our Interminable Election Eve by Jonah Goldman Kay David Hockney’s Portraits on Paper by The Paris Review Wait! What Year Is This? by Rich Cohen Memory Haunts by Imani Perry The Art of Distance No. 32 by The Paris Review Staff Picks: People, Places, and Poems by The Paris Review
1.5644s , 10109.3671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Taro Kai Archives】,Co-creation Information Network