Nvidia meteu um concorrente do FSR. Basicamente deu um up no scaling que já tinha e adicionou presets:
NVIDIA Image Scaling Available Now
As part of our new Game Ready Driver, we’re today releasing an updated
NVIDIA Image Scaling feature, available via GeForce Experience and the NVIDIA Control Panel. And to enable developers to incorporate the new technique into their games, we’re releasing NVIDIA Image Scaling as a free, platform-agnostic open source SDK.
For the past two years, NVIDIA has offered a driver-based spatial upscaler called NVIDIA Image Scaling and Sharpening, for all your games, that didn’t require game or SDK integrations to work.
With the new November
GeForce Game Ready Driver, we have improved the scaling and sharpening algorithm to now use a 6-tap filter with 4 directional scaling and adaptive sharpening filters to boost performance. And we have also added an in-game sharpness slider, accessible via GeForce Experience, so you can do real-time customizations to sharpness.
Activating NVIDIA Image Scaling Through The NVIDIA Control Panel
1. To activate the newly updated feature, simply open the NVIDIA Control Panel, click onto “Manage 3D Settings”, and activate the “Image Scaling” setting as shown below
2. When you enable Image Scaling, the driver generates 5 additional scaling resolutions based on your native monitor resolution that you can select from in-game settings menus to use with NVIDIA Image Scaling. We recommend doing a quick reboot to ensure your games recognize these new resolutions
Scaling % | Input Resolution for 4K Output | Input Resolution for 1440p Output | Input Resolution for 1080p Output |
85% | 3264 x 1836 | 2176 x 1224 | 1632 x 918 |
77% | 2954 x 1662 | 1970 x 1108 | 1477 x 831 |
67% | 2560 x 1440 | 1706 x 960 | 1280 x 720 |
59% | 2259 x 1271 | 1506 x 847 | 1129 x 635 |
50% | 1920 x 1080 | 1280 x 720 | Not Supported by Windows |
3. You can set global sharpness settings for all your games at once, or manage per-game tuning through the Program Settings tab of “Manage 3D Settings.
Now that you have enabled NVIDIA Image Scaling in the driver, the next step is to set the render resolution for your game.
4. For each game, go into the in-game settings and select Fullscreen mode*
5. Set the desired render resolution. NVIDIA Image Scaling will automatically upscale the lower render resolution to your display's native resolution and sharpen (e.g. 2880x1620 upscaled to 3840x2160)
6. If you enable the overlay indicator, a “NIS” text label will appear in the upper left corner of the screen. A green text color indicates that NVIDIA Image Scaling is scaling and sharpening the game. If the text is colored blue, then NVIDIA Image Scaling is sharpening but not scaling
*For games that don’t offer Full Screen mode, you can lower the render resolution of your desktop, which will enable NVIDIA Image Scaling. To do so, head to “Change resolution” in the NVIDIA Control Panel.