Skip to main content

Real-time ray tracing to come to Windows 7 through DirectX 12 support

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Gamers stubbornly hanging on to Windows 7 and refusing to upgrade to Windows 10 may soon be able to play ray tracing-enabled titles on Microsoft’s older platform. The company is expanding its efforts to support DirectX 12 on the aging operating system, which means that game developers will soon be able to port DirectX Ray tracing, or DXR, titles to Windows 7. Given that the aging operating system commands a little more than 31% of the Windows OS market share, the move could also help spur adoption of Nvidia’s latest GeForce RTX graphics cards among Windows 7 gamers who previously had no reason to upgrade their GPUs given that they weren’t able to take advantage of the flagship ray tracing feature of the new cards.

This latest effort from Microsoft in supporting gamers on Windows 7 follows a more limited effort to bring DirectX to Blizzard’s World of Warcraft on Windows 7 late last year. That move brought substantial improvements to game play, including a boost in frame rates, given that DirectX added multi-threading support. At the time, however, Microsoft cautioned that Windows 10 still had OS improvements that would make low-level graphics API run more efficiently.

Recommended Videos

A potential reason for Microsoft loosening its grips on tying DirectX 12 to Windows 10 is that adoption for Microsoft’s newest operating system has grown enough that the company now feels comfortable enough to bring the feature to older platforms.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“We announced World of Warcraft uses DirectX 12 running on Windows 7 back in March,” Microsoft’s graphics team program manager Jianye Lu wrote in a blog post detailing the company’s efforts to support more Windows 7 gamers. “Since that time, we have received a warm welcome from the gaming community, and we continued to work with several game studios to further evaluate this work.” The blog post also included three different resources for developers looking to add DirectX 12 support for games running on Windows 7, including guidance documents, sample codes, and the necessary binary files and license terms.

DirectX 12 is a low-level graphics API that gives game developers access to the graphics card hardware, and it is a major component in enabling DirectX Raytracing. If you’re a developer interested in DirectX 12 access for Windows 7 or are looking to port ray tracing titles to the older operating system, you can also join the conversation on Discord.

In addition to working with Blizzard, Wccftech reported that Microsoft will also allow Windows 7 gamers to play Gears 5 on the platform if the game was purchased on Steam.

In addition to gamers, creatives working in a Windows 7 environment could also stand to gain from Microsoft’s expanding support of DirectX 12.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
I tested Intel’s new XeSS 2 to see if it really holds up against DLSS 3
The Intel logo on the Arc B580 graphics card.

Although it technically arrived alongside the Arc B580, Intel quickly disabled its new XeSS 2 feature shortly after it was introduced. Now, it's back via a new driver update, and with a few fixes to major crashes issues. I took XeSS 2 out for a spin with the Arc B580, which has quickly climbed up the rankings among the best graphics cards, but does XeSS 2 hold up its side of the bargain?

XeSS 2 is Intel's bid to fight back against Nvidia's wildly popular DLSS 3. The upscaling component at the core of XeSS is the same, but XeSS 2 includes both a Reflex-like latency reduction feature and, critically, frame generation. The latency reduction, called XeLL, is enabled by default with frame generation.

Read more
Windows PCs now works with the Quest 3, and I tried it out for myself
i tried windows new mixed reality link with my quest 3 alan truly sits in front of a pc and adjusts virtual screen while wear

Microsoft and Meta teamed up on a new feature that lets me use my Windows PC while wearing a Quest 3 or 3S, and it’s super easy to connect and use. I simply glance at my computer and tap a floating button to use Windows in VR on large displays only I can see.

Meta’s new Quest 3 and 3S are among the best VR headsets for standalone gaming and media consumption. When I want more performance or need to run one of the best Windows apps that aren’t yet available in VR, I can connect to a much more powerful Windows PC.
Setting up Mixed Reality Link
Scanning Microsoft's Mixed Reality Link QR code with a Meta Quest 3 Photo by Tracey Truly / Digital Trends

Read more
How to transfer your books from Goodreads to StoryGraph
Front page of a book on Onyx BOOX Go 10.3 tablet.

Goodreads has been the only game in town for Android and iOS book-tracking for a long time now, and like most monopolies, it has grown old and fat. Acquired by Amazon in 2013, avid book readers have had lots to complain about in recent years, with the service languishing unloved, with no serious updates and an aging interface. It's been due some serious competition for a long time, and lo and behold, some has arrived. StoryGraph is a book-tracking app that offers everything you'll find on Goodreads but with an algorithm that lets you know about what you might love, and adds features any bibliophile will know are essential — like a Did Not Finish list.

Read more