RTX Video Super Resolution is coming this month with their R530 series drivers

Expect this feature to arrive with Nvidia's GeForce 53x.xx drivers

RTX Video Super Resolution is coming this month with their R530 series drivers

Expect RTX Video Super Resolution to launch this month

Earlier this week we reported on the fact that Google's Chrome browser has been updated enable support for Nvidia's RTX Video Super Resolution feature, a feature that is due to arrive later this month for users of RTX 30 and RTX 40 series GPUs. 

RTX Video Super Resolution is designed to upscale video content to higher resolutions, making streamed video more detailed and visually appealing. Chrome version 110 has laid the groundwork needed to support Nvidia's RTX Video Super Resolution feature, but Nvidia GPU users are wondering when to expect Nvidia to enable this feature in their drivers. Thankfully, Nvidia has answered this question over on their GeForce forums.

Nvidia's latest GeForce driver is version 528.49, which is part of Nvidia's R520 series of drivers. Nvidia has confirmed that RTX Video Super Resolution is coming with their R530 series drivers, which are due to launch later this month. These drivers will deliver RTX Video Super Resolution support to RTX 30 and RTX 40 series hardware. A future driver release is currently expected to enable this feature for RTX 20 series GPU users.

RTX Video Super Resolution is coming this month with their R530 series drivers

Nvidia's RTX Video Super Resolution feature need to be enabled within Nvidia's Control Panel to function with supported drivers. This means that RTX Video Super Resolution will not be enabled by default for RTX GPU users. Additionally, this feature will not be available on battery powered systems due to its power requirements, which means that notebook users can only use this feature when their system is plugged in. This oddity is likely due to how notebooks tend to utilise integrated graphics solutions when browsing the web when in battery mode.

You can join the discussion on Nvidia's RTX Video Super Resolution feature coming this month with their GeForce R530 series drivers on the OC3D Forums

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Most Recent Comments

09-02-2023, 15:44:43

dazbobaby
Streaming services like twitch, youtube and the like REALLY REALLY need this to work.


But isn't it just shifting the cost from the host to the client? Surely this will use more GPU power, even if it's only 20watts, it's still money out of my pocket.Quote

09-02-2023, 16:40:29

meuvoy
Quote:
Originally Posted by dazbobaby View Post
Streaming services like twitch, youtube and the like REALLY REALLY need this to work.


But isn't it just shifting the cost from the host to the client? Surely this will use more GPU power, even if it's only 20watts, it's still money out of my pocket.
You can always just disable the feature if you really don't want it. But I'd really rather pay one or two bucks more on my power bill than to pay a monthly 5-7$ Subscription fee to Youtube, just so I can wach high-res content.Quote

10-02-2023, 10:38:22

Gothmoth
curious to see how well that works in reality and outside gaming videos.

in the end DLSS needs some beefy pre-calculations to work with games.

and this shall work on-the-fly with all kind of video content.

the demo video of the game content looks impressive.
but i am more interested in how well this can improve old concert videos on YT.Quote
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