Skip to content
GameOverHere
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Feature
  • Nintendo
  • PC
  • Xbox
GameOverHere
GameOverHere
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Feature
  • Nintendo
  • PC
  • Xbox
GameOverHere
  PC  I got my hands on Nvidia GeForce Now’s new RTX 5080 upgrade and I couldn’t tell the games weren’t running locally, but 4K with frame gen was a little laggy
PC

I got my hands on Nvidia GeForce Now’s new RTX 5080 upgrade and I couldn’t tell the games weren’t running locally, but 4K with frame gen was a little laggy

AdminAdmin—August 26, 20250

Nvidia recently announced its “biggest launch in GeForce Now RTX” history which includes an upgrade to RTX 5080 performance, and last week I got some hands-on time with the new and improved game streaming service. As a big proponent of local, discrete, good ol’ fashioned hardware, I wasn’t quite expecting how good it feels to play GeForce Now (GFN) on the latest Blackwell servers: I could not tell the difference. Like, at all.

At least, that was the case with Apex Legends at 1440p on low to medium settings. I’m talking of course, about latency, here, as that’s the main concern with competitive shooters, which is a genre that’s usually more my jam than the latest AAA singleplayer games.

You’ll get bigger benefits at 1080p, though. One of the upgrades coming to GFN is the ability to play at 360 fps at 1080p, and Nvidia had Overwatch 2 running at these settings with an LDAT (Latency and Display Analysis Tool) precisely measuring the total system latency. This is a little device that attaches to the monitor and records the time between pressing the button and the gunfire appearing on screen.


Related Articles

I pressed the heck out of that little button and I don’t think I saw it go above 20 ms, most often about 17 ms and sometimes as low as 16 ms. That’s low even for a local, non-streamed setup.

I found Apex Legends at 1440p more impressive than this, though, primarily because this is the resolution I usually play at. I got to actually run around and (attempt to) click heads in Apex on RTX 5080 GFN at this resolution, and I couldn’t tell it was streamed gameplay at all. I used to no-life competitive shooters like Counter-Strike, and I can tell you I would be happy playing that game competitively at 1440p if it maintains that level of snappiness.

Advertisement

I spoke to Nvidia GeForce Now product manager Michael McSorley, and he explained: “When we say 5080 performance, it’s actually, performance wise, more than a 5080 in some ways.” That’s because these “super pods”, as they call them, that run the new GFN instances, don’t just seat RTX 5080 graphics cards in there. A super pod is a bespoke Blackwell server setup specifically for GFN workloads, with future AI features in mind, too.

Nvidia showcasing its new GeForce Now RTX 5080 upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

McSorley continues, “when we say 5080 performance, we’re really just trying to say, from a pure rasterisation standpoint and performance standpoint, it’s pretty similar to what a 5080 consumer GPU is.”

More stories

High On Life 2: Why Squanch Added a Whole New Hub-Based Design

September 11, 2025

Japan’s space agency officially ends decade-plus mission that carried Hatsune Miku into space one year after losing probe somewhere above Venus

September 21, 2025

How a Traditional Blacksmith Created Ninja Gaiden 4’s Swords in Real Life

September 23, 2025

Xbox Tokyo Game Show 2025 Broadcast: Everything Announced, Including the Forza Horizon 6 Setting

September 25, 2025

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Whatever the technical details, I’m impressed. The improvements to latency, which the company says it has focused on in addition to visual fidelity, certainly seemed clear to me.

That’s not to say I think it’s perfect, however. While my experience of low latency was great at 1440p on low settings in Apex, I noticed a lot of latency in a recent Borderlands title (no, I couldn’t tell which one) running at 4K over GFN, and ditto Black Myth: Wukong. Frame rates were high, presumably thanks to frame gen, which also increases latency, but latency was pretty awful. Even for casual gaming, in my opinion.

This is part of what worries me about the direction PC gaming is heading. The RTX 50 series’ Multi-Frame Gen (MFG) is great for frame rates, sure, but it does increase latency, especially if you’re starting at a lower frame rate—and MFG might arguably encourage game devs to not optimise for pre-frame gen frame rates. Combine that with streaming, however optimised the experience, and you have extra latency.

Nvidia showcasing its new GeForce Now RTX 5080 upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

I asked about getting this balance between visual quality and latency, and McSorley said: “When you look at the most compelling FPS or competitive titles on GeForce Now, they tend to not require, you know, Multi Frame Generation in general, to get the highest graphics fidelity, because that’s not really that style of game.”

On the other hand, there are “these immersive kinds of games” such as Assassin’s Creed, “that you’re going to sit back and play, where, if you’re adding 20 milliseconds of latency, it’s not going to be one that’s detrimental to the overall experience, right?”

That’s the theory, anyway, but as I said, I did think the latency was a little much in these high-fidelity “immersive” games on the highest settings. But again, I don’t know whether that’s a mark against GFN or frame gen. If I had to bet, I’d say frame gen, given the low latency I witnessed in Apex and 1080p Overwatch. Though I suppose it could also be added by the “Cinematic Quality Streaming” mode, which improves the video filter, offers a wider colour gamut, and so on.

The upgraded “more than a 5080” GFN experience will be rolling out pretty much right away, although games will be limited to start, with more compatible games being announced regularly. I’m told that we should see GeForce Now Thursdays—where new games are announced to the platform—including a section showing which of these games will be able to run on the new Blackwell hardware.

Apparently, “at some point, we’re certainly going to upgrade our entire fleet of servers”, but “we have to be strategic in how we do that.”

Though I suppose there’s no telling exactly how long that will take. For all we know, it could take up until the next GPU generation, though I’m hopeful it won’t take that long.

Legion Go S SteamOS edition

Best handheld PC 2025

All our current recommendations
Advertisement
Super Meat Boy 3D Adds Multiple New Dimensions to a Classic Platformer
Overwatch 2’s Season 18 is Live Now!
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
PC

Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for October 22 (#1586)

October 22, 20250
PC

A cheap SanDisk memory card was just found completely unscathed inside an underwater camera found among OceanGate submersible wreckage

October 20, 20250
PC

Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for October 18 (#1582)

October 18, 20250
Load more
Read also
Xbox

How Ember Knights was Built from the Ground Up for Co-op

October 23, 20250
Xbox

Battle in the Heavens: Ninja Gaiden 4 Makes Gaming History in the Air

October 22, 20250
PC

Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for October 22 (#1586)

October 22, 20250
Playstation

Festival of Accord: Dreamspell comes to Monster Hunter Wilds starting October 22

October 22, 20250
Xbox

Where Shadows Fall, Legends Rise: Ninja Gaiden 4 is Available Today for Xbox

October 21, 20250
Xbox

How to Get Started in the World of Pax Dei, Available Now with PC Game Pass

October 20, 20250
Load more
Recent Posts
  • How Ember Knights was Built from the Ground Up for Co-op
  • Battle in the Heavens: Ninja Gaiden 4 Makes Gaming History in the Air
  • Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for October 22 (#1586)
  • Festival of Accord: Dreamspell comes to Monster Hunter Wilds starting October 22
  • Where Shadows Fall, Legends Rise: Ninja Gaiden 4 is Available Today for Xbox
  • How to Get Started in the World of Pax Dei, Available Now with PC Game Pass
  • Battlefield 6 — 9 ways it evolves the franchise’s formula
  • A cheap SanDisk memory card was just found completely unscathed inside an underwater camera found among OceanGate submersible wreckage
  • JDM: Japanese Drift Master races to Xbox this November
  • Official PlayStation Podcast Episode 526: Lost in the Game Sauce
    © 2024, All Rights Reserved.
    • About us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions