Goto

Collaborating Authors

 fsr 4


PlayStation's Mark Cerny says a version of FSR 4 could be implemented on the PS5 Pro

Engadget

AMD just debuted its new FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4) upscaling tech on the latest Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 Ti GPUs, and it sounds like it might not be limited PCs. According to a new Digital Foundry interview with Mark Cerny, some version of FSR 4 will make it into the PlayStation 5 Pro via a software update rather than new hardware. "Our target is to have something very similar to FSR 4's upscaler available on PS5 Pro for 2026 titles as the next evolution of PSSR," Cerny tells Digital Foundry. The PS5 Pro's PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR) is a custom upscaling technology that lets the console run lower-resolution versions of games and make them appear like they're 4K, and by Cerny's own lengthy explanation, it was created using a combination of existing and future AMD tech. Based on our review of AMD's new GPUs, FSR 4 is not a miracle worker.


AMD Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT review: The new 1440p gaming champions

PCWorld

Some software bugs mar the experience but overall, AMD's 9070 graphics cards offer such a compelling mix of performance, value, and memory capacity that it's worth accepting those quibbles. Nvidia fumbled the ball with its 549 GeForce RTX 5070, and AMD's new Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT are primed to seize advantage. The RTX 5070, hitting store shelves today, is a good 1440p graphics card but a stagnant generational sidegrade at best. Enter the 549 Radeon RX 9070 and 599 Radeon RX 9070 XT, launching tomorrow. Both cards are faster than the RTX 5070, with the 9070 XT going toe-to-toe with the 750 RTX 5070 Ti in many games, and each includes an ample 16GB of VRAM.


AMD's 549 Radeon 9070 and 599 9070 XT are gunning for NVIDIA's mid-range throne

Engadget

AMD's decision to start off with mid-range RDNA 4 GPUs now seems prescient. NVIDIA's high-end RTX 5090 and 5080 are already selling well beyond their absurdly high prices, if you can find any in stock at all. And while the RTX 5070 Ti impressed us, it's already selling for close to the 5080's 1,000 launch price. Now AMD's Radeon 9070 and 9070 XT, which are set to arrive on March 6, have the chance to swoop in and deliver some serious competition. Based on early briefings from AMD, which include some impressive benchmarks (still untested by us), the RDNA 4 GPUs appear to be compelling 4K and 1,440p for discerning gamers who aren't ready to drop four figures on a video card.


AMD's Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT target '4K gaming at a 1440p price'

PCWorld

The long wait is over. After kinda-sorta-teasing the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT at CES 2025, AMD is finally pulling back the curtain on its next-generation graphics cards today, ahead of a March 6 launch date. AMD shuffled Radeon's branding this generation to mirror Nvidia's; the Radeon 599 RX 9070 XT will thus compete with the 749 RTX 5070 Ti, while the Radeon 549 RX 9070 takes aim at the 549 RTX 5070. Let's start with an overview of the improvements found in AMD's new RDNA 4 graphics architecture, before moving onto details about the Radeon RX 9070 series specifically, and what's coming with FSR 4 and Hypr-RX. One thing revealed in AMD's CES teaser: The Radeon 9000-series is built from the ground up for an AI future.