Nvidia is expanding itsDeep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS)feature on all fronts. The companyannounced 28 new gamesthat will support the upscaling tech over the coming months, as well as drivers for the upcoming Windows 11 release and a new feature that could make games look better than ever.
DLSS is now supported in over 100 games, over a quarter of which were announced on Monday. Leading the lineup isAlan Wake Remastered,which is an updated version of the 2010 title from Remedy Entertainment that’s set to release on October 5. Nvidia claims up to a 2x performance improvement at 4K, with a card like the RTX 3060 Ti jumping from 53.5 frames per second (fps) to 97.1 fps in the DLSS Performance mode.
The other supported games don’t come with the same name recognition. Unlike previousDLSS announcements, this one is stuffed to the brim with smaller indie titles likeSevered Steel, Cions of Vega,andPowerslide Legends.The wide adoption is on the back of Nvidia’s DLSS plugins for Unreal Engine 4 and 5, as well as Unity.
Unreal Engine and Unity are both free, enabling indie developers to use them without the upfront cost.In the past, Nvidia required developers to file an application and be approved to access DLSS. Now, the DLSS software development kit (SDK) is freely available, and developers can access the plugins through Unity and Unreal free of charge.
Although most of the new games aren’t AAA blockbusters, Nvidia’slatest driversupports several large current and upcoming titles. The latest driver supports the recently-launchedDeathloop,as well as the upcomingDiablo II: ResurrectedandFar Cry 6.This driver also comes with support for Windows 11 ahead of its October 5 launch.
The new driver brings support for DirectX 12 Ultimate features onWindows 11, such as Auto HDR and DirectStorage. Along with the Game Ready driver, Nvidia launched its Studio driver, as well, supporting Quadro and other work-related graphics tasks on upcoming PCs. Nvidia says the new driver also brings enhancements to Nvidia Broadcast “thanks to under the hood Windows 11 changes.”
Nvidia is continuing to expand DLSS with new games and broader support, but it’s also expanding the feature in another way. The company announced a new version of DLSS called Deep Learning Anti-Aliasing (DLAA) that’s debuting onThe Elder Scrolls Onlinetest servers starting on Monday.
In short, DLAA is DLSS with the upscaling portion removed. It still relies on Nvidia’s deep learning system in DLSS, but it uses that information for better anti-aliasing instead of upscaling. Nvidia says the new feature is for players “who have spare GPU headroom and want higher levels of image quality.”
The Elder Scrolls Onlineis the first game to support the feature. That said, it appears DLAA is based on the same backbone as DLSS, so more titles could receive support in the near future. Nvidia also announced DLSS forThe Elder Scrolls Online,which is available in the game now. Like DLSS, DLAA is only supported on RTX 20-series and 30-series graphics cards.
This DLSS news comes as adoption for AMD’sFidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR)technology has slowed. Intel is likely putting some pressure on Nvidia, as well. The company is set to release its first add-in desktop graphics cards inearly 2022 with XeSS, which is an upscaling feature that’s similar to DLSS.