NVIDIA DLSS 3 coming to Dragon Age: The Veilguard, Red Dead Redemption, and more

More than 600 games and applications feature RTX technologies, and this week a new batch of games are launching with NVIDIA DLSS, NVIDIA Reflex, and advanced ray-traced effects.
Rise as Rook, Dragon Age’s newest hero in Dragon Age: The Veilguard. Players can choose who they want to be and play how they want to play as they fight to stop the gods from blighting the world. When BioWare and Electronic Arts’ Dragon Age: The Veilguard launches on October 31, gamers can accelerate performance with NVIDIA DLSS 3. They can also enhance image quality and immersion with ray-traced reflections and ray-traced ambient occlusion. On GeForce RTX 40 Series graphics cards, NVIDIA DLSS 3 with Frame Generation and Super Resolution multiplies performance at 4K by an average of 2.5X, with ray tracing and other settings maxed using the Ultra preset. For those that may not have the latest hardware, Dragon Age: The Veilguard will also be available to play at launch in the cloud on GeForce NOW.

Those looking for a more familiar adventure with stunning new visuals and upgraded features, can try Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered when it launches on October 31. This multi-award-winning action role-playing game brings to life the beloved wilds of Aloy’s world in even higher fidelity with the power and potential of PC gaming. GeForce RTX gamers can accelerate performance with NVIDIA DLSS 3 with Frame Generation and Super Resolution. It makes gameplay even more responsive with NVIDIA Reflex, and max out image quality with NVIDIA DLAA (which can be used in concert with Frame Generation). NVIDIA has also launched Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered GeForce Game Ready Driver, getting the players’ system ready for the game, which is also available as a $10 upgrade for owners of the original Horizon Zero Dawn PC release.

Additionally, for the first time in its storied legacy, John Marston’s beloved journey can be experienced in Red Dead Redemption on PC in stunning, new detail, with both Red Dead Redemption and its iconic zombie-horror companion story, Undead Nightmare, out now on PC. In collaboration with Double Eleven, Rockstar Games’ new release adds PC-specific enhancements including adjustable draw distances, shadow quality settings, native 4K resolution rendering at up to 144 FPS / 144Hz on compatible hardware, monitor support for both Ultrawide (21:9) and Super Ultrawide (32:9), HDR10 support, full keyboard and mouse functionality, and more. There is also day-one support for NVIDIA DLSS 3 with Frame Generation and Super Resolution, and NVIDIA Reflex.

Lastly, Torque Drift 2, the ray-traced racing game from Grease Monkey Games now includes support for NVIDIA DLSS 3 with Frame Generation and Super Resolution, as well as NVIDIA Reflex. Torque Drift 2 is an immersive motorsport game set in an alternate reality modern-day Japan, which builds upon the well-received Torque Drift 1 and years of community feedback from the first title to deliver a skill-based drifting game. Using Torque Drift 2’s newly-added NVIDIA DLSS 3 and Reflex upgrades, GeForce RTX 40 Series gamers can multiply performance with every setting maxed while the hardest races become easier through more responsive latency.

 

Have your say!

0 0