I bought the RX 9070 XT for FSR 4, but the games I actually play don’t support it
When I bought my RX 9070 XT upon release, I expected FSR 4 to be one of the bigger parts of my upgrade. AMD's machine-learning upscaler had been positioned as the answer to DLSS, and the actual gameplay footage that was put out by reviewers backed up the image quality claims. A year later, with Adrenalin 25.12.1 installed and the FSR 4 override toggle sitting right there in the driver, I still spend most of my evenings on FSR 3.1 or whatever older version a given game shipped with. Not because FSR 4 looks worse, but because the games actually loaded on my drive don't qualify for the override more often than they do. The toggle is a great piece of engineering, but the widespread support it promises isn't as widespread in practice.
When I bought my RX 9070 XT upon release, I expected FSR 4 to be one of the bigger parts of my upgrade. AMD’s machine-learning upscaler had been positioned as the answer to DLSS, and the actual gameplay footage that was put out by reviewers backed up the image quality claims. A year later, with Adrenalin 25.12.1 installed and the FSR 4 override toggle sitting right there in the driver, I still spend most of my evenings on FSR 3.1 or whatever older version a given game shipped with. Not because FSR 4 looks worse, but because the games actually loaded on my drive don’t qualify for the override more often than they do. The toggle is a great piece of engineering, but the widespread support it promises isn’t as widespread in practice.
Filippa Hansen
Denmark
Denmark
Published by: aplhsindia.in
