# GCORE (Silver) — ClusterMAX GPU Cloud Review > GCORE earns a ClusterMAX 2.0 Silver rating from SemiAnalysis. GCORE is a Luxembourg-based provider that was founded in 2014, originally focusing on gaming, CDN, and general purpose cloud. But now, AI. GCORE offers GPUs across Europe, including datacenters in Luxembourg, Portugal, Germany, the… - **Provider**: GCORE - **ClusterMAX Tier**: Silver - **Tier definition**: Adequate offering with noticeable gaps compared to Gold or Platinum. Room for improvement. - **Authors**: Jordan Nanos, Daniel Nishball, Dylan Patel (SemiAnalysis) - **Published**: 2025-11-06 (Nov 06, 2025) - **Last updated**: 2025-11-06 (Nov 06, 2025) - **Source**: ClusterMAX 2.0 - **Canonical URL**: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/gcore - **Source article**: https://newsletter.semianalysis.com/p/clustermax-20-the-industry-standard - **Topics**: GCORE review, GCORE GPU cloud, GCORE ClusterMAX rating, GCORE Silver, Silver tier GPU cloud, GPU cloud review, neocloud review, GCORE B200, B200 cloud, RoCE, Kubernetes, Slurm, NCCL, ClusterMAX 2.0, SemiAnalysis --- GCORE is a Luxembourg-based provider that was founded in 2014, originally focusing on gaming, CDN, and general purpose cloud. But now, AI. GCORE offers GPUs across Europe, including datacenters in Luxembourg, Portugal, Germany, the Netherlands, the UK, and the US (Virginia and California). They also have plans to go into the Nordics, partially via self-build, but also via an established partnership with Northern Data Group (also known as Taiga Cloud). It’s unclear where this partnership will go, as Northern Data apparently just had their offices raided over tax fraud allegations related to crypto mining operations in 2023. The GCORE platform is feature rich, with a nice balance of usability and strong underlying hardware performance. Unfortunately, only Kubernetes was available to test for us. We learned after the fact that their Slurm-on-Kubernetes offering, based on SOperator, is [buried in API documentation](https://gcore.com/docs/api-reference/cloud/managed-kubernetes/create-k8s-cluster#body-add-ons-slurm). We look forward to testing this in the future. [](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!HQ3I!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fb200cc78-4890-4c38-90ad-cb7e86ac6a8d_937x510.png)Source: The GCORE console (alt: what we wish our AWS console looked like) The onboarding process began with a series of manual hurdles where we quickly realized we were dealing with an enterprise-ready console modeled after the hyperscalers. After creating an account, we were required to request a quota increase to spin up a cluster. Interestingly, while at the hyperscalers we can approve these quote increases ourselves, with GCORE there was a nameless faceless support team member making the decision for us. This actually resulted in us needing to make three separate attempts (over the course of two working days) to get quota approved for 2TiB of VAST Storage to go with our 2-node kubernetes cluster. [](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!ZEE8!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F6c9e9284-6f8d-4ddd-b2fa-9f67e6a4e21d_937x495.png)Source: GCORE Forging ahead, we followed the required steps: creating a three virtual networks, a VPC, provisioning our Kubernetes cluster, which promptly became stuck in a “provisioning” state for over two hours before ultimately failing. Notably, GCORE takes networking seriously: routers, configurable networks, floating IPs, firewalls, and reserved IPs. It can just make things confusing on setup for non-cloud native users. [](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!NQE1!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Feae21b51-4c1b-4fe1-a0ea-7aae893b1734_937x505.png)Source: Setting up a router for our Kubernetes cluster on GCORE Our second attempt was more successful, at least on the surface. The cluster spun-up correctly, including a default ReadWriteMany StorageClass using the VAST quota we fought so hard for. Unfortunately, the cluster was delivered without the Nvidia GPU Operator or the Network Operator. This is a critical point for many general-purpose clouds that have kubernetes experience but miss some of the basics when they turn to serving the AI market. Some opinions (like having the GPU and Network Operator pre-installed) are worth enforcing in customer clusters. After confirming that performance on nccl-tests, a torchtitan pretraining job, and disaggregated prefill/decode inference endpoints via llm-d was working as expected we turned to focus on monitoring. Unfortunately, this seems to be left completely up to the user. While gold and platinum tier providers handle the CNI, CSI, active/passive health checks (e.g. via node-problem-detector or custom controllers and CRDs), kube-prometheus-stack (i.e. on a Grafana dashboard), and Slurm-on-Kubernetes, GCORE leaves that all that stuff up to the user. Overall, GCORE’s platform is strong, and one of the best purely self-service offerings we tried for kubernetes. The console includes all the enterprise goodies one would expect, and it makes sense why this enable them to sell into large enterprise with PCI DSS compliance and a global datacenter footprint. We encourage GCORE to develop an advanced cluster monitoring dashboard, implement active/passive health checks on the kubernetes layer, and consider developing a first-class Slurm-on-Kubernetes experience over time. --- Other Silver tier providers: - Together: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/together - Lambda: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/lambda - Google Cloud (GCP): https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/googlecloud - Amazon Web Services (AWS): https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/amazonwebservices - Scaleway: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/scaleway - Cirrascale: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/cirrascale - Firmus / Sustainable Metal Cloud (SMC): https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/firmussustainablemetalcloud - GMO Cloud: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/gmocloud - Vultr: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/vultr - Voltage Park: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/voltagepark - Tensorwave: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview/tensorwave Full ClusterMAX 2.0 + 2.1 index: https://www.clustermax.ai/cloudreview Full LLM dump of all reviews: https://www.clustermax.ai/llms-full.txt