copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
What is DSR? Do i want to use it? : r nvidia - Reddit DSR is an anti-aliasing method that runs your games at a higher resolution, then downscales it to your monitor It is more taxing than other forms of AA such as TAA or FXAA Generally, you want a 4x DSR factor, but that would mean you're running at 4k if you have a 1080p panel, making it a poor solution for modern games
DLDSR DSR - What scaling resolution and smoothness should I choose? With DSR, the slider provides a gaussian blur from 0% off to 100% max blur With DLDSR, the slider is a sharpening filter with 0% most sharpening and 100% no sharpening How much you use of each is personal preference and also depends on the scaling size With 4x DSR I recommend 0% slider, 2 25x DLDSR 100% slider
Tip: Combine DLDSR with DLSS : r pcgaming - Reddit DSR DLDSR has a performance cost of its own Rendering a game at a given resolution will perform better if the display resolution is the same and it doesn't have to go through that downscaling As such, it only makes sense to use if you can already render the game at well at native resolution and have the headroom to spare
(Tutorial) Using Custom Resolutions + NVIDIA DSR DLDSR DSR x4 800x600(1600x1200) will NOT look as good as native 1600x1200, supersampling only works well when the resolution is high in the first place So if you prefer superior PQ to refresh, use a higher resolution lower refresh like 1600x1200@75hz, you will get an amazing picture and a very respectable refresh rate
Can anyone give me a basic explanation of DSR DLDSR DLSS and . . . - Reddit So for example with DSR you could scale down from four times your current resolution but this gets much more expensive the larger your base resolution is With DLDSR you can get comparable quality with a quarter or so of the total pixels you would be rendering with 4x DSR (1 6-something and 2 25 scale, the DLDSR options, average out to about
DLDSR vs DSR : r nvidia - Reddit 4x DSR is the only DSR mode worth using This with 0% smoothness is the best DSR can look If that is too performance heavy, you look at DLDSR instead 2 25x DLDSR looks much, much better than 2 25x DSR I use DLDSR with 100% smoothness, always Anything other than 100% makes games look way sharper than the original image for me
Using DSR and DLSS at the same time - Is this an option to . . . - Reddit In general, DSR looks a bit blurrier, so it only makes sense when you're getting enough extra detail at higher rendering resolution to compensate for that - either with or without DLSS And if you're going to just render games at 8K, without DLSS - then I don't know if the games actually have enough detail so that you get much more at 8K
DSR - dynamic super resolution. Explain the difference between . . . - Reddit In fact even if you disable dsr you can find "1080p, 1920 x 1080" in the "Ultra HD, HD, SD" section and "1920 x 1080" in the PC section The difference is the timings, "Ultra HD, HD, SD" is the global standard that should be supported by everything (media players, av receivers, consoles, etc ) but it has lower refresh rate
DLDSR, DLSS and DSR what do i use when? : r nvidia - Reddit If you want better visuals and got GPU horsepower to spare and don’t mind lower frame rates DSR But don’t use DSR if DLDSR is available because it uses AI to get more image for the same performance hit DSR and Deep Learning DSR are not really necessary either I lean towards using them in “sight seeing games” like Tomb Raider, etc
DSR not an option? : r nvidia - Reddit It’s related to the overclock feature I have two LG 27GP950-B monitors, and DSR and the contemporary Image Scaling features are gone if I enable the 160 Hz refresh rate mode Instead, I now have the older Image Sharpening settings If I leave the monitors at the stock 144 Hz, DSR and Image Scaling return