Nvidia’s now bundling Alan Wake II with RTX 40 series GPUs

Alan Wake II, Nvidia’s next RTX showcase, is now available for free with RTX 40 series graphics cards

Remedy’s Alan Wake II is launching on October 27th, and it may be one of the best looking PC games of 2023. Like Control before it, Alan Wake II will be a major showcase title for Nvidia. The game will support all of Nvidia’s latest DLSS technologies, including DLSS 3.5 Ray Reconstruction, and support full ray tracing on PC.

With DLSS Ray Reconstruction, DLSS Frame Generation, and DLSS Super Resolution, Nvidia are promising gamers higher framerates and better visuals thanks to their newest AI technologies. In the trailer below, Nvidia showcases greater than 3x framerate boosts thanks to DLSS. On top of that, ray reconstruction helps to make the game look better on PC. We have already reviewed DLSS Ray Reconstruction’s visual impact in Cyberpunk 2077.

Alan Wake II will be available on both PC and consoles, and on PC the game will be playable with either rasterised graphics, or in a full ray tracing mode. With full ray tracing, Nvidia has worked to make the PC version of Alan Wake II the definitive way to play the game. Alan Wake II’s visuals on PC will be a generation ahead of the game’s console versions, but only for gamers with strong enough hardware.

Nvidia’s Alan Wake II GPU/Game bundle will be available until November 13th. Game codes will be available to GPU buyers digitally if they purchase their GPUs from a participating retailer.

This new GPU bundle is available to RTX 4090, RTX 4080, RTX 4070 Ti, and RTX 4070 GPU purchasers. This offer also applied to equivalent GeForce laptop GPUs. Buyers must purchase their RTX 40 series graphics card at a participating retailer to take advantage of this bundle offer. You can find a list of participating retailers in your country here.

Sadly, this offer is not available for RTX 4060 and RTX 4060 Ti GPU purchasers.

You can join the discussion on Nvidia’s new Alan Wake GPU/Game Bundle on the OC3D Forums.

Mark Campbell

Mark Campbell

A Northern Irish father, husband, and techie that works to turn tea and coffee into articles when he isn’t painting his extensive minis collection or using things to make other things.

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