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Red Dead Redemption 2 Gets DLSS On PC, Boosts Performance By 45%

Rockstar's western open-world game can now benefit from Nvidia's DLSS for better performance.

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Red Dead Redemption 2 is a stunning game, and one that will easily tax the most powerful PCs out there to run at its highest level of detail. That makes today's release of Nvidia DLSS support for the open-world game so exciting, letting Nvidia customers enjoy higher framerates without much compromise.

If you're unfamiliar, DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) is Nvidia's proprietary upscaling solution, utilizing specific machine-learning cores in its RTX line of GPUs. Games that support it can be rendered at a lower resolution, allowing you to enjoy higher framerates, while the deep learning algorithm upscales the result with little to no image quality impact.

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Now Playing: Red Dead Redemption 2 PC - Opening Cinematic (Max Graphics Setting)

It's a feature that has really bolstered Nvidia's position in the GPU market, with AMD still trying to come up with a suitable competitor. With Red Dead Redemption 2, Nvidia is saying you can expect up to 45% better performance when using the "Performance" DLSS preset, which renders the game at a quarter of your native resolution. That means rendering the game at 1080p on a 4K display, for example.

This improvement will allow you to play Red Dead Redemption 2 at 4K in excess of 90fps at its highest settings on a RTX 3080 Ti, or above 60fps at 1080p with any RTX graphics card. The patch is out now and available for anyone with an RTX 20 or 30-series GPU.

The update arrives with a new content drop for Red Dead Online. Blood Money adds a bunch of new lawless activities to the connected American frontier, including new high-stakes robberies and tense showdowns.

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firedrakes

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funny now. games cant do native anymore. gpu cant get larger and more power hungry... so we got to fake it.

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masscrack

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Edited By masscrack

@firedrakes: dlss is sometimes better or as good as native resolution

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firedrakes

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@masscrack said:

@firedrakes: dlss is sometimes better or as good as native resolution

if you dont master it correctly sure. seems that what happens some times in games and video content. nothing new.

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firedrakes

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@winny4u:

dlss a smart way to up scale.

my OG point is the hardware cant keep up with the software now on games.

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CJ_Topspin

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...I guess, considering I can't get an RTX card without paying a MASSIVE upcharge, my GTX 1070 and I can just go eat a bag of dicks.

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GeminiJ13

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@cj_topspin: I also have the exact GPU that you do and I generally get really good FPS. Around 55-60 on one of the presets. High I think. I'm very pleased with the performance that I do get with my 1070, but I can fully understand where you are coming from in regards to the shortages and scalper prices we have to face should we want to upgrade. My only hope is when the next generation of GPU's hits the shelves, I might be able to snag a secondhand 30 series card for what they cost new at MSRP.

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CJ_Topspin

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@geminij13: "My only hope is when the next generation of GPU's hits the shelves, I might be able to snag a secondhand 30 series card for what they cost new at MSRP."

I'm right there with you friend. Hope they might be even cheaper than MSRP if they start cracking down on crypto.

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jenovaschilld

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@geminij13: I have two gaming setups, home and work. Yeah I play games at work also. I have two AMD cards and have been wanting to upgrade, but I will not pay over MSRP.

Strangely I have a 5700 that is very powerful for 2k games at high FPS, but it cannot be overclocked hardly at all, it was clocked near its limit. Meanwhile I have an older RX 580 with 8gGRAM that is overclock like crazy. I had to replace a fan, and replaced them with Noctua 90mm deeps, and modded the card for fit. It just cannot ever get hot enough, past 70c for it to throttle, I just cannot raise the voltage any higher before problems. So it screams along, while not as powerful as the 5700, it is amazing at 2k for 60 fps, and high fps for 1080p. It has been a true workhorse.

Video cards are starting to flood the market used, by miners, so that is a good sign of some relaxation in the video card market. Hopefully we will have a sweet spot in 22 like we did in 2018 when computer components were going dirt cheap.

Another issue in the gaming PC word is streamers, and content creators who need certain components, making it harder on PC gamers to get a decent price on on PC builds. But with the pandemic mostly over, people are going back to work and kids back to school. Alot of streamers are giving up, or upgrading which means some great deals on used components. Like ram, power supplies, and powerful mobos.

I would buy carefully, at this time, and if possible, hold out to later if able.

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wolfpup7

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That’s kind of a misnomer. It doesn’t give you better performance, it’s an up scaling mode that lets you fake higher resolutions if you don’t have the power to actually run them.

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analgrin

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@wolfpup7: well to me it looks much sharper and more detailed (TAA blur is gone) while also vastly improving fps. So improved fidelity AND improved frame rates seems like a performance boost to me.

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bbq_R0ADK1LL

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@wolfpup7: Having played games with DLSS 2.0, I'd say that improved performance is a fair statement.

If there was a patch that just tweaked things like LOD distance, particle effects etc. (like most games get leading up to launch) & gave you an extra 10fps, most people would call that improved performance.

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BeefoTheBold

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You'll still spend an ungodly amount of time hunting animals for little real, actual, benefit, but at least you'll look better and move more smoothly while you do.

Joking aside, I do like this technology and how it improves games that implement it.

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