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Microsoft signs 10-year deal with Nvidia.
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Microsoft recently held an important meeting with Nvidia, which resulted in the two parties signing a 10-year deal. This comes after the company surprised us by signing another similar deal with Nintendo.
Some time ago, the Xbox branch manager in Phil Spencer About the signing of a deal between Microsoft and Nvidia for a period of ten years. This agreement will allow bringing Xbox games that will be released on PC to the GeForce Now service, as well as Activision games that will be released on PC, including the Call of Duty series, will be available for the service when the acquisition is completed.
This deal was preceded by a simple offer made to Sony, but the latter reportedly rejected the offer. So Microsoft turned to Nintendo to sign a deal with them, as we discussed here. And now it is repeating with the company Nvidia to support its cloud service GeForce Now.
The convention was attended by the Director of Microsoft Brad Smith, And according to charlieIntelSmith says the recently announced deal with Nintendo will bring Call of Duty to “an additional 150 million devices that don’t exist today.”
In addition to the new deal, Smith mentioned that the 10-year agreement that Nintendo and Nvidia signed is “ready for Sony.” However, Sony still refuses to sign the agreement to keep the said title on PlayStation in case the acquisition is completed. As for Phil Spencer, he had this to say after completing the deal:
“Xbox remains committed to giving people more choice and finding ways to expand the way people play games. This partnership will help grow NVIDIA’s game catalog to include titles like Call of Duty, while also giving developers more ways to stream games. We’re excited to give gamers more ways to play the games they love.”
With Sony and other companies like Google still rejecting this deal, is there any hope of stopping it?
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