A new generation of Nvidia graphics cards launched yesterday (not that you can actually buy any of them), so it’s no surprise that there’s a substantial driver update to go along with them. What is surprising is that said drivers aren’t just for the RTX 50-series, though there’s certainly a lot in there for them. The updates also include performance improvements for previous cards as old as the RTX 2080 from 2018.
PC Gamer notes that in addition to a host of new goodies for the RTX 5080, 5090, and 40-series, enhancements to the enhanced ray reconstruction, super resolution, and deep learning anti-aliasing should boost performance on the RTX 30-series and 20-series, too. Nvidia doesn’t call these cards out in its lengthy blog post for the latest app/driver update, but older cards can indeed take advantage of these new enhancements according to the chart below.
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Nvidia
Note that some of these features are still in beta and might need to be manually enabled before you can see benefits.
The newer 40- and 50-series cards get the bulk of the enhancements in the new DLSS 4 model, of course, most notably the much-vaunted frame generation feature. The 50-series can do multi-frame generation with up to four AI-generated frames in between conventionally rendered game frames. It’s a very cool trick, even if some gamers aren’t sold on “fake frames” as a legitimate performance upgrade.
The RTX 5090 is an impressive card, as Brad says in his review. The RTX 5080… not so much. But laying down four figures for a GPU (again, if you can even find one right now) might be a little less painful if you can see Nvidia supporting older hardware almost seven years after release.
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