DLSS 2.0 in Death Stranding - Nvidia 4K Performance Trump Card
DLSS Performance at 1080p
Published: 15th July 2020 | Source: OC3D Internal Testing | Price: |
DLSS Performance at 1080p
At 1080p, all RTX series graphics card can deliver average framerates of 100FPS or more, making the performance boosts offered by DLSS and CAS unnecessary outside of high refresh rate PC gamers.
With the RTX 2080 Ti, we were able to achieve Death Stranding's highest performance levels with DLSS and CAS disabled, potentially due to CPU-related performance limitations. DLSS and CAS may utilise additional CPU cycles, removing the performance advantages of these features.
At 1080p, DLSS can allow Nvidia's RTX 2060 to run at 120+ FPS framerates at all times, creating an ideal scenario for users fo high refresh rate G-Sync enabled monitors. The PS4 can run Death Stranding at 30Hz, but with an RTX 2060, 100+ FPS framerates are easy to achieve.
Most Recent Comments
I didn't think much of it, until I saw that chick's face. Her eyebrows look so much better, just so much more detail there.
I'm glad this is becoming a used thing now. |
TBH, while I love DLSS 2.0, I really want to see a 3rd party alternative that can work on both AMD and Nvidia cards. That's surely coming, as console makers will want to see this kind of upsampling, I want to see this kind of thing widely adopted on both the software and hardware side.Quote
Yeah, in many scenes both look near-identical, but when TAA artefacts come into play, DLSS 2.0 wins hard. I didn't believe how good DLSS looked initially.
TBH, while I love DLSS 2.0, I really want to see a 3rd party alternative that can work on both AMD and Nvidia cards. That's surely coming, as console makers will want to see this kind of upsampling, I want to see this kind of thing widely adopted on both the software and hardware side. |
Consoles would kill for this feature, but we need to see what will AMD do. They don't have hundreds of thousands of Tesla GPUs in the basement doing all AI training, neither they have years of AI development like Nvidia has.
The console market is absurdly large so there may be an AMD alternative. Will it be this good remains to be seen.Quote
It will be hard to make 3rd party software that does it on both AMD and Nvidia cards. It will be either-or. This is a hardware-specific feature. Tensor cores are doing all the AI stuff locally on GPU die. AMD cards won't have that on their dies. And I don't think that stream cores can do all that math efficiently.
Consoles would kill for this feature, but we need to see what will AMD do. They don't have hundreds of thousands of Tesla GPUs in the basement doing all AI training, neither they have years of AI development like Nvidia has. The console market is absurdly large so there may be an AMD alternative. Will it be this good remains to be seen. |
I'm glad this is becoming a used thing now.Quote