DOOM: The Dark Ages Gets NVIDIA’s Game Ready Driver Plus More DLSS 4 Games Added
NVIDIA has released a new GeForce Game Ready Driver optimizing any GeForce PC or laptop for DOOM: The Dark Ages, featuring native idTech8 ray tracing and enhanced by DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and NVIDIA Reflex. Additionally, it adds support for New World: Aeternum‘s DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and NVIDIA Reflex update, plus support for 15 new and updated NVIDIA app DLSS overrides, 7 new G-SYNC Compatible gaming displays, and 2 new Optimal Playable Settings profiles.
The long-awaited, much-anticipated DOOM: The Dark Ages will be available in Early Access from May 13th for those who purchased the Premium Edition or the GeForce RTX 50 Series bundle and will be available globally on May 15th. GeForce RTX gamers will receive the definitive PC experience thanks to NVIDIA’s technical partnership with id Software. Multiply frame rates on GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs on average by 4X at 4K using DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation. Double performance on GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs using DLSS Frame Generation and enhance image quality on all GeForce RTX GPUs with DLSS Super Resolution’s transformer AI model. Accelerate DOOM: The Dark Ages’ native idTech8 ray tracing technologies with GeForce RTX Ray Tracing Cores and make gameplay even more responsive with NVIDIA Reflex. Shortly after launch, an update will introduce PC-exclusive Path Tracing, taking ray-traced lighting to the next level on GeForce RTX 50 series GPUs thanks to DLSS Ray Reconstruction. Gamers can also play DOOM: The Dark Ages by streaming it from the cloud with an Ultimate or Performance membership with NVIDIA GeForce NOW.
Amazon Games’ New World: Aeternum is a thrilling action RPG set on the supernatural island of Aeternum. As a shipwrecked explorer who washes ashore on the mysterious island, players forge their destiny on an adventure-filled with danger and opportunity. On May 13, New World: Aeternum Season 8 – Season of the Divide went live, and introduced DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation. GeForce RTX 50 Series players can get the highest frame rates possible using DLSS Multi Frame Generation, GeForce RTX 40 Series owners can boost performance with DLSS Frame Generation, and everyone can activate DLSS Super Resolution. Additionally, players can activate NVIDIA Reflex, making gameplay even more responsive by reducing PC latency.
NVIDIA App is the essential companion for users with NVIDIA GPUs in their PCs and laptops. One of the most recent additions is the ability to upgrade games and apps with support for DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, and improved DLSS AI models. Today, 15 new DLSS overrides for the latest games are now available, multiplying performance, enhancing image quality, and improving the gaming experience – see here for the full list of games and apps with DLSS overrides. The newest Game Ready Driver also adds support for 7 G-SYNC Compatible displays that deliver a baseline Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) experience that makes your gaming smoother and more enjoyable.
This week, DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation is multiplying performance in DOOM: The Dark Ages, Empyreal, and more. Additionally, Deedlee Doo! Carkour! is available now with DLSS Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution.
Step into the blood-stained boots of the DOOM Slayer in DOOM: The Dark Ages with the game-changing capabilities of GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs. The game launches in Early Access today and globally on May 15th. Developed on the all-new idTech8 engine with native ray tracing technology, DOOM: The Dark Ages delivers next-level graphical fidelity, speed, and visuals. And when played on a GeForce RTX 50 Series graphics card or laptop, AI-powered NVIDIA DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation boosts frame rates and constructs high-quality images, further enhancing the visuals for the definitive DOOM: The Dark Ages PC experience. DOOM: The Dark Ages’ gameplay is also at its fastest and most responsive on GeForce RTX GPUs thanks to the inclusion of NVIDIA Reflex.
Also available from May 13th, while supplies last, is the exclusive DOOM: The Dark Ages Verdant DOOM Slayer skin in the NVIDIA app, enabling gamers to customize their in-game look.
Silent Games and Secret Mode’s Empyreal is a complex, challenging, feature-rich action RPG. Venture inside the Monolith and face the automatons that yet remain, remnants of the impossibly ancient civilization that built this unknowable structure. Empyreal is available now with out-of-the-box support for DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation.
Deedlee Doo! Carkour! is a new game comes from Nate Purkeypile, a 21-year game industry veteran who has worked on several of the the best-selling and highest rated games ever made. Now working solo under the banner Just Purkey Games, Deedlee Doo! Carkour! is a game in which you parkour with a car using explosions. Deedlee Doo! Carkour! entered Early Access yesterday, with out of the box support for DLSS Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution.
The 2006 Game of the Year, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered, has been modernized, with all new stunning visuals and refined gameplay. Explore the vast landscape of Cyrodiil like never before and stop the forces of Oblivion from overtaking the land in one of the greatest RPGs ever made, from the award-winning Bethesda Game Studios. GeForce RTX 50 Series owners can enable DLSS Multi Frame Generation via NVIDIA app overrides, massively multiplying performance. GeForce RTX 40 Series owners can enable DLSS Frame Generation to boost frame rates, and take advantage of the latest Frame Generation AI model via the NVIDIA app. All GeForce RTX owners can enable DLSS Super Resolution, which can be upgraded to the newest transformer AI model via the NVIDIA app, further enhancing image quality. Additionally, DLAA is available to enable even higher levels of detail, NVIDIA Reflex further reduces PC latency, and the dedicated Ray Tracing Cores found on all GeForce RTX GPUs help keep performance high when activating the game’s hardware-accelerated, Unreal Engine 5, ray-traced Lumen lighting effects.
Comments are closed.