As we discovered in Death Stranding, DLSS was able to turn any RTX card into a 4K 60fps machine when it was switched on in Kojima Productions' apocalyptic postie sim, and its latest DLSS 2.0 iteration was so similar to native 4K that you might as well turn it on anyway. To see this content please enable targeting cookies.
METACRITIC WATCH DOGS 2 PC PC
Whereas other ray tracing games such as Shadow Of The Tomb Raider and Metro Exodus are just about playable on higher-end RTX cards without the aid of DLSS at lower resolutions these days - especially if you've got an RTX 3070 or RTX 3080 inside your PC - Watch Dogs Legion is a lot more taxing, making DLSS pretty much mandatory for all ray tracing graphics card owners. Watch Dogs Legion's ray tracing effects take quite the toll on your overall frame rate compared to other ray tracing games, regardless of whether you're playing at 1920x1080 or above. It's also one of the growing number of games to support Nvidia's performance-boosting DLSS tech - and based on my initial testing of the game's ray tracing effects on PC, you're definitely going to need it if you want to admire the UK's dystopian capital in all its reflective glory, even if you managed to bag yourself one of Nvidia's newly-released RTX 3070 cards. Watch Dogs Legion is one of this year's big ray tracing games, utilising ray traced reflections to bring the wet, rainy streets of London to life.