|
Post by ForRealTho on Apr 10, 2023 11:26:25 GMT -5
So rather then type this big long thing explaining how Deep Learning Dynamic Super Resolution(DLDSR) works I will link this Linus Tech Tips video:
I've been using SGSSAA for old games like Thief and Dishonored for years. The issue is you have to use Nvidia Inspector to enable it for every game you want to use it with, and after driver updates sometimes it will forget those settings.
DLDSR is similar to SGSSAA in that it uses extra GPU power for great AA, it also performs way better then traditional DSR or SGSSAA.
Super easy to enable. Just go to the Nvidia Control panel and check the boxes for 1.75x and 2.25x DLDSR.
Then in any title that supports it you just go to the resolution menu and pick the two resolutions associated with those scaling levels of DLDSR. Done. You never have to open Nvidia Inspector, if you wipe your drivers and reinstall you just check those two boxes in the Nvidia control panel.
I didn't do a deep dive to SGSSAA 4x and 8x vs DLDSR 1.75x and 2.25x but I am going to assume SGSSAA has the quality lead but good luck running it on new games if don't have a 4090, always with hacks like SGSSAA it can break at a moments notice vs an "official" feature like DLDSR which Nvidia actively is developing and promoting.
The other cool thing is it is compatible with DLSS. I tried Resident Evil 7 with DLSS Quality and DSDSR and it worked fine.
The only catch is if you alt-tab a lot its not very alt-tab friendly. I turned it off in RE7 because I am streaming it for a friend and it crashed while I was alt-tabbing.
|
|
|
Post by ForRealTho on Apr 10, 2023 14:43:20 GMT -5
Great video with examples. I didn't think to try it with Alan Wake. That game has terrible options for AA control.
|
|