Ubisoft has clear an offer with Nvidia
that will see some of the play PC games optimized for GeForce GPUs. TXAA technology supported and anti-aliasing that currently
provides the Hollywood movie industry with levels of soft shadows,
smooth animation , and
advanced DirextX11 tessellation.
“The PC remains one of the world’s most popular gaming platforms, and
we’re committed to offering PC players the best possible experience
with our games,” said Tony Key, senior vice president of sales and
marketing, Ubisoft.
The titles of PC games that come under this “alliance” include Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist, which is due for arrival. The Digital Deluxe version is already developed available in the new “Splinter Cell Blacklist”. Other Cards based on graphics GeForce GTX 660, 660 Ti, 670, 680, 760, 770 or 780 GPUs. five pieces of “sneaktastic” gear, five bonus stealth suits, and five weapons. A Splinter Cell: Conviction code is also included at no extra charge.
More new from Ubisoft PC games optimized for the GeForce GPUs with Assassin’s Creed IV Black Flag and Watch Dogs, which release on October 30 and November 15 respectively. Ubisoft said that Nvidia’s Developer Technology Team worked closely with the developers of each game to create GeForce-optimized “worlds that deliver new heights of realism and immersion.”
“PC gaming is stronger than ever and Ubisoft understands that PC gamers demand a truly elite experience, the best resolutions, the smoothest frame rates and the latest gaming breakthroughs…We’ve worked closely with Ubisoft’s incredibly talented creative teams throughout the development process to process our technologies and deliver the most amazing and visually spectacular game worlds that we can imaginable.” said Tony Tamasi, senior vice president of content and technology at Nvidia.
This news arrives after AMD revealed its Never Settle Forever bundle that allows customers to pick games from a limited library of popular titles, depending on the Radeon card they buy. The program provides the user with three tiers: Bronze, Silver or Gold, that grants one, two or three free games respectively. AMD is also supplying APUs for the upcoming Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles, which should be incredibly lucrative business for a company that is struggling to gain its footing in a declining desktop market. AMD has also entered the cloud gaming market with its Radeon Sky line of server-side single-and dual-slot cards.
The titles of PC games that come under this “alliance” include Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist, which is due for arrival. The Digital Deluxe version is already developed available in the new “Splinter Cell Blacklist”. Other Cards based on graphics GeForce GTX 660, 660 Ti, 670, 680, 760, 770 or 780 GPUs. five pieces of “sneaktastic” gear, five bonus stealth suits, and five weapons. A Splinter Cell: Conviction code is also included at no extra charge.
More new from Ubisoft PC games optimized for the GeForce GPUs with Assassin’s Creed IV Black Flag and Watch Dogs, which release on October 30 and November 15 respectively. Ubisoft said that Nvidia’s Developer Technology Team worked closely with the developers of each game to create GeForce-optimized “worlds that deliver new heights of realism and immersion.”
“PC gaming is stronger than ever and Ubisoft understands that PC gamers demand a truly elite experience, the best resolutions, the smoothest frame rates and the latest gaming breakthroughs…We’ve worked closely with Ubisoft’s incredibly talented creative teams throughout the development process to process our technologies and deliver the most amazing and visually spectacular game worlds that we can imaginable.” said Tony Tamasi, senior vice president of content and technology at Nvidia.
This news arrives after AMD revealed its Never Settle Forever bundle that allows customers to pick games from a limited library of popular titles, depending on the Radeon card they buy. The program provides the user with three tiers: Bronze, Silver or Gold, that grants one, two or three free games respectively. AMD is also supplying APUs for the upcoming Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles, which should be incredibly lucrative business for a company that is struggling to gain its footing in a declining desktop market. AMD has also entered the cloud gaming market with its Radeon Sky line of server-side single-and dual-slot cards.
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