Skip to main content

Nvidia’s DLSS 2.0 to bring boosted frame rates without the blurry textures

Just last week, Nvidia and Microsoft announced new ray tracing features with the launch of DirectX 12 Ultimate. Now, Nvidia is following that up with a second iteration of its DLSS (deep learning super sampling) technology. Nvidia claims DLSS 2.0 will greatly improve game visuals and performance using its artificial intelligence-based approach to rendering.

Recommended Videos

The format was originally introduced with Nvidia’s Turing architecture, which debuted on the company’s GeForce RTX 2080 graphics. DLSS uses machine learning to analyze tens of thousands of reference images to help increase frame rates.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Unlike the olde,  temporal anti-aliasing-based rendering approach, DLSS conserves system resources by examining a lower resolution scene and compares it to the reference images to determine how the scene should be rendered at a higher resolution. For Nvidia, it was a way of compensating for the heavy toll that ray tracing took on performance.

With DLSS 2.0, Nvidia aims to close the performance gap further. Even on midrange GPUs like the RTX 2060, Nvidia claims you should see a boost in frame rates, visual fidelity, and scene details.

Nvidia DLSS 2.0 update
Nvidia showcases DLSS 2.0 on Mechwarrior 5 Nvidia

Nvidia executives showcased the power of DLSS in a number of demos prior to the feature’s announcement, comparing the performance with DLSS 2.0 enabled at 1440p resolution against a game without the feature turned on. The result was delightfully impressive.

In Mechwarrior 5, with DLSS disabled at 1440p resolution on the RTX 2060, the game played at a respectable 71 frames per second. With DLSS 1.0 enabled, performance jumped to 95 FPS, and you’re getting more visual details, better colors, and more realism — it’s like HDR for your game.

In the demo, the colors in the landscape were punchier, and the scene appears sharper, though text appears slightly blurry, a likely result of oversharpening. With DLSS 2.0 enabled, the scene benefits from the same enhanced details as DLSS 1.0, but here text appears to be crisper. Nvidia was able to achieve a similarly high 95 FPS with the new update, showing that you’re not trading off game performance for visual fidelity.

Nvidia

Control DLC will get updated to DLSS 2.0, and in that game, Nvidia showed that even peripheral background text in the game’s scene also gets sharpened, making text and details easier to read and see. When the game is played at 1080p resolution, you’re getting almost a 70 percent boost in frame rates with DLSS 2.0 enabled.

Whereas a game at 1080p played at just 36 FPS without DLSS, the same game jumps to 61 FPS with DLSS 2.0 while also providing upgraded visual fidelity, showing more details.

For fast, action-packed games, DLSS 2.0 will also improve the image quality of objects in motion, so you’re going to see crisper movements throughout the game. DLSS 2.0 is available now, Nvidia said, on titles such as Wolfenstein: Youngblood, Deliver Us the MoonMecharrior 5, and Unreal Engine, with dozens more titles coming soon.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth proves, once again, that 8GB GPUs are on their way out
Final Fantasy VII Rebirth running on the Steam Deck.

Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth is headed to PC in a few short weeks, and ahead of the release, Square Enix has released the PC requirements for the game. There are a couple of interesting specs, but one stands out in particular. Even some of the best graphics cards, particularly those packing 8GB of VRAM, might struggle to run the game.

You can see the full system requirements below. At the bottom of the list for each of the configurations, there's a note about VRAM capacity. For 1080p and 1440p, the requirements call for a GPU with at least 12GB of video memory when used with a 4K monitor, while at proper 4K, the requirements call for a GPU with 16GB of memory.

Read more
Don’t get your hopes up for next-gen GPUs just yet
Two RTX 4060 graphics cards stacked on top of each other.

The list of the best graphics cards will probably look a lot different in a month's time. We're standing on the edge of the next generation of graphics cards, and it looks like Nvidia, AMD, and Intel all have big plans in store. At least from the conversations I've had, all eyes are on what the next generation of graphics cards has to offer before making an upgrade decision.

That's generally good advice -- if new hardware is about to launch, there isn't much reason to spend up for last-gen components. You'll likely pay a higher price, and you could be missing out on some big performance gains. This generation, however, it's important to temper expectations. Although the next generation of graphics cards is exciting, it probably won't be a reality for most gamers anytime soon.
Always start with the flagships

Read more
Yes, it’s real: ChatGPT has its own 800 number
1-800-chatgpt

On the 10th of its "12 Days of OpenAI" media event, the company announced that it has set up an 800 number (1-800-ChatGPT, of course) where anyone in the U.S. with a phone line can dial in and speak with the AI via Advanced Voice Mode. Because why not.

“[The goal of] OpenAI is to make artificial general intelligence beneficial to all of humanity, and part of that is making it as accessible as possible to as many people as we can,” the company's chief product officer, Kevin Weil, said during the Wednesday live stream. “Today, we’re taking the next step and bringing ChatGPT to your telephone.”

Read more