• AMDs next-gen frame rate booster leaves the most popular GPU in t

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Mar 25 14:45:03 2022
    AMDs next-gen frame rate booster leaves the most popular GPU in the world out in the cold

    Date:
    Fri, 25 Mar 2022 14:36:10 +0000

    Description:
    AMDs sequel to FSR promises to be a good deal better, but also more taxing on the GPU.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    The most popular graphics card out there (at least going by Steams hardware survey stats ) falls below the recommended requirements for AMDs incoming next-gen frame rate boosting feature.

    Team Red recently revealed FSR 2.0 (the successor to the original FidelityFX Super Resolution tech), and made it clear that version 2.0 will not be usable (in theory more on that later) by those with an Nvidia GTX 1060 graphics
    card (whereas v1.0 was compatible).

    The new baseline where support for Nvidia cards begins is the GTX 16 Series (Turing) and GTX 1070 from the previous Pascal generation. On the AMD side, the base GPUs are the RX 6500 XT and RX 590.

    This is a recommendation, mind, so not a hard-and-fast rule, but nonetheless the GTX 1060 and RX 580 for that matter cant clear the bar with FSR 2.0 running at 1080p.

    Higher resolutions make even greater demands on your graphics hardware, of course. Were talking an RX 6600 or RX 5600 (or RX Vega) or better, or an RTX 2060 and GTX 1080 (or RTX 3060 for current-gen) when it comes to 1440p.

    4K calls for an RX 6700 XT or RX 5700 and above, and an RTX 2070 or RTX 3070 for those with Team Green.

    FSR 2.0 is expected to be released at some point in Q2. Analysis: The
    temporal price but all is not lost for GTX 1060 owners

    First off, why the greater demands here? Well, FSR 2.0 moves to use temporal upscaling, rather than spatial upscaling as seen in FSR 1.0, the difference being that the former uses data drawn from past frames (not just the current frame) to improve overall quality. Unsurprisingly, upping the quality to better compete with Nvidias rival DLSS tech is more taxing for the GPU, and theres no way around that.

    Still, these are only recommendations from AMD, and it could be the case that in certain PCs, maybe with faster CPUs or other components working alongside the popular GTX 1060, the results could be palatable (at least in some
    games).

    In short, this isnt a black-and-white supported-or-unsupported situation; therell be shades of grey, and some owners with slightly underpowered GPUs compared to AMDs suggestions might get away with it at 1080p.

    Team Red itself noted: Depending on your specific system specifications, the system requirements of individual games that support FSR 2.0, and your target resolution, you may be still able to have a good upscaling experience on lower-performing or older GPUs [than the recommended ones].

    Further tweaks to FSR 2.0 could improve the situation going forward, as well, as our sister site PC Gamer points out, while also observing that it seems like the new tech depends considerably on memory bandwidth to work well. (The RTX 3050 is notably not recommended, whereas the GTX 1070 gets a shout and the latter offers more bandwidth, even though technically the 3050 is a slightly faster card).

    Finally, its worth remembering that AMD also now has Radeon Super Resolution (RSR) on the table as a more basic frame rate booster, and one that applies across a great deal of games, not just those coded to support it (FSR support must be baked-in by game developers). The catch with RSR is that its directly in the Radeon driver, so while its good for AMD GPUs, Nvidia card owners cant benefit from it. Check out all the best gaming PCs



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/amds-next-gen-frame-rate-booster-leaves-the-mos t-popular-gpu-in-the-world-out-in-the-cold/


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)