Goto

Collaborating Authors

 rtx gpus


NVIDIA announced DLSS 4 will come to all RTX GPUs

Engadget

At CES 2025, NVIDIA introduced DLSS 4, the latest version of its real-time image upscaling technology, and announced that it will come to all RTX GPUs. That includes the RTX 20 series that was discontinued back in 2020, but the older models aren't getting all its features. In the new GeForce RTX 50 series models, DLSS 4 will enable Multi Frame Generation. This feature will generate up to three additional frames for every traditionally rendered one, and it can help multiply frame rates by up to eight times more than traditional brute-force rendering. NVIDIA claims 4K 240 FPS fully ray-traced gaming will be possible thanks to Multiple Frame Generation when using its GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, the new 1,999 flagship GPU arriving later this month.


NVIDIA DLSS 4 is coming to all RTX GPUs

Engadget

NVIDIA has introduced DLSS 4, the latest version of its real-time image upscaling technology, at CES 2025. It is coming to all RTX GPUs, including the RTX 20 series that was discontinued back in 2020, but the older models aren't getting all its features. In the new GeForce RTX 50 series models, DLSS 4 will enable Multi Frame Generation. The feature generates up to three additional frames for every traditionally rendered one and can help multiply frame rates by up to eight times more than traditional brute-force rendering. NVIDIA says the improvements brought by Multiple Frame Generation on the GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, its new 1,999 flagship GPU arriving this month, will enable 4K 240 FPS fully ray-traced gaming.


AMD RSR vs. FSR: What's the difference, and which should you use?

PCWorld

AMD recently released its Radeon Super Resolution (RSR) feature, which promises to speed up the performance of your games. AMD already offered a similar technology dubbed "FidelityFX Super Resolution," or FSR, and it's been adopted at a blistering rate since its introduction last summer. Don't let the names get lost in translation, however. We'll explain exactly what each one does, along with when you should use them. And trust us--having both of these available means better PC gaming in general. AMD, Intel, and Nvidia all have their own versions of upsampling technology.


1 Artificial Intelligence Stock That Could Crush the Market

#artificialintelligence

Most stock pickers have one goal: to beat the market. Since January 2015, the S&P 500 has returned an average 13% per year, or 110% total. That's not bad, but it pales in comparison to NVIDIA's (NASDAQ:NVDA) 3,410% return over the same period. Given the chipmaker's $438 billion market cap, investors may think it's too late to buy this stock. But NVIDIA recently delivered strong first-quarter results, reminding Wall Street that it's still a growth company.


Nvidia DLSS in 2020: Stunning Results

#artificialintelligence

We've been waiting to reexamine Nvidia's Deep Learning Super Sampling for a long time, partly because we wanted new games to come out featuring Nvidia's updated algorithm. We also wanted to ask Nvidia as many questions as we could to really dig into the current state of DLSS. Today's article is going to cover everything. We'll be looking at the latest titles to use DLSS, focusing primarily on Control and Wolfenstein: Youngblood, to see how Nvidia's DLSS 2.0 (as we're calling it) stacks up. This will include our usual suite of visual comparisons looking at DLSS compared to native image quality, resolution scaling, and various other post processing techniques. Then, of course, there will be a look at performance across all of Nvidia's RTX GPUs. We'll also be briefly reviewing the original launch games that used DLSS to see what's changed here, and there will be plenty of discussion on the RTX ecosystem, Nvidia's marketing, expectations, disappointments, and so on. Strap yourselves in because this is going to be a comprehensive look at where DLSS stands today.