Nvidia's Next Multibillion-Dollar Opportunity Is Hiding in Plain Sight

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Artificial intelligence (AI) has been the driving force behind Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock's impressive rise over the past couple of years, as major cloud service providers and governments have been rushing to get their hands on the company's chips to train large language models (LLMs) so that they can launch AI services for customers.

AI has had such a huge impact on Nvidia's business that the company now gets 88% of its total revenue from this segment. Gaming, once Nvidia's bread and butter, now accounts for just over 9% of its top line. That's why it is not surprising to see why analysts and investors take a keen interest in Nvidia's data center business, as this segment now plays a critical role in deciding the direction the stock will take on the market.

However, savvy investors shouldn't miss out on the long-term growth opportunities that Nvidia could take advantage of either. Of course, the data center business is the biggest growth driver for Nvidia right now, but there is another segment that could contribute impressively to its growth in the coming years. Let's take a closer look at that opportunity.

Nvidia has set its sights on this potentially massive growth opportunity

At the CES 2025 trade show, Nvidia announced that it is widening the reach of its GeForce Now cloud-gaming platform. The company points out that GeForce Now can turn "any device into a GeForce RTX gaming PC," and gamers will be able to access this service from the Steam Deck handheld gaming console, as well as virtual and mixed-reality headsets from the likes of Apple, Meta Platforms, and ByteDance.

Nvidia will also launch a GeForce RTX data center in India in the first half of 2025. It is worth noting that the company launched such data centers in Japan, Colombia, and Chile last year. So, Nvidia's cloud-gaming service could witness a robust increase in adoption this year thanks to its availability on more devices and in more regions across the globe.

Nvidia's GeForce Now expansion is coming at a good time thanks to the growing spending on cloud gaming. Financial advisory and consulting firm Alix Partners estimates that consumers are likely to spend more money on streaming games from the cloud rather than investing in gaming consoles and personal computers (PCs).

The firm points out that the availability of AAA games -- which are high-quality video games published by major studios -- on mobile devices along with the availability of fast internet connections and cloud infrastructure that supports such games will boost the adoption of cloud gaming. Additionally, cloud gaming doesn't require expensive hardware such as graphics cards or consoles as the games run on remote servers and are delivered to devices through the internet.