Skip to main content

You can finally try out AMD Super Resolution in one of the few launch titles

Following an announcement at Computex 2021, AMD has officially released its FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR). According to AMD, FSR can achieve up to a 2.4x increase in performance versus native 4K, and it works across several generations of graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia.

At launch, FSR support is available in seven games: Godfall, The Riftbreaker, 22nd Century Racing Series, Anno 1800, Evil Genius 2, Kingshunt, and Terminator Resistance. AMD also announced several upcoming games that will support the feature, including Far Cry 6, Resident Evil Village, and Forspoken. Over 40 developers have signed up to work with FSR, so you can expect even more games to feature it over the coming months.

AMD showed off benchmarks for the biggest titles in the launch lineup. At 4K with ray tracing turned on, Godfall jumped from an average of 64 frames per second (fps) to 156 fps at 4K in FSR’s Performance mode. That was with the already powerful RX 6900 XT. Using the more modest GTX 1060 at 1080p, Godfall went from 40 fps to 58 fps with the Performance mode.

Super Resolution performance in three games.

Performance mode is the most aggressive of the four modes FSR can run in. Ultra Quality mode provides 1.3x scaling and is as close to native resolution as possible. Quality provides 1.5x scaling, Balanced offers 1.7x scaling, and Performance provides 2x scaling. In the Performance mode, FSR can upscale a 1080p image to 4K or a 720p image to 1440p. In our hands-on testing of FSR, we found that Ultra Quality mode is the best. It delivers a significant performance boost and doesn’t fall victim to visual artifacts like some of the other modes.

FSR is similar to Nvidia’s deep learning super sampling (DLSS), but it works differently. AMD’s feature doesn’t require any specific hardware or per-game training. Instead, FSR sits in the rendering pipeline directly before on-screen effects. It takes a low-input resolution and upscales it through two passes. First, the image is passed through an edge reconstruction algorithm to replicate native resolution. After that, the frame goes through a sharpening pass to restore detail.

Explanation of AMD's Super Resolution technology.

Because FSR doesn’t require specific hardware, it works across multiple GPU generations. AMD says FSR is already working on its RX 6000/6000M, RX 5000/5000M, RX Vega, RX 500, and Ryzen 2000 processors with Radeon graphics. It also works on the RX 480, 470, and 460, as well as Nvidia’s RTX 30-series, RTX 20-series, and GTX 10/16-series graphics cards. Although FSR works on Nvidia cards, AMD says it isn’t optimizing the feature for them.

FSR is coming to the GPUOpen platform in mid-July with support for DirectX 11 and 12, as well as Vulkan. Developers will be able to implement the open-source code into their games with support for fixed and dynamic resolution upscaling. Although FSR is optimized on a per-game basis, it doesn’t require per-game training. It will work on virtually any platform, including Linux and Mac, if developers choose to enable it.

AMD says FSR is only the first step into this upscaling realm. The company is continuing to work on other upscaling techniques, including improvements to FSR and new upscaling methods. You can start using FSR today in supported games by downloading the driver from AMD’s support site, and you can request new titles through AMD’s FSR wish list.

Jacob Roach
Senior Staff Writer, Computing
Jacob Roach is a writer covering computing and gaming at Digital Trends. After realizing Crysis wouldn't run on a laptop, he…
It turns out AMD isn’t cutting GPU prices after all
AMD RX 6950 XT graphics card on a pink background.

Nearly two weeks ago, AMD published a chart showing price cuts to every card in its RX 6000 range, following the controversy surrounding the RTX 4090's absurdly high price tag. It turns out those price cuts aren't official -- they're just what AMD's graphics cards are currently selling for on Newegg.

The chart (below) clarifies that the prices were gathered from Newegg, but it still suggests that AMD was cutting the official list price of its GPUs. That's what we originally published on September 22, and we weren't alone. TechPowerUp proclaimed "AMD cuts MSRPs of Radeon RX 6000 series graphics cards," while Wccftech reported "official price cuts." PCMag also ran the story, though it has since updated the article with a statement from AMD.

Read more
Everything announced at AMD’s Ryzen 7000 launch
AMD CEO holding a Ryzen 7000 processor.

AMD has wrapped an event focused on its Ryzen 7000 processors. The battle between AMD and Intel continues to be fierce in 2022, and AMD seems to be beating Intel to the punch with its next generation of processors.

The battle for a top slot on the list of the best processors is more competitive now than it has been in years. With new features like DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 on Ryzen 7000 and Intel's continued push for hybrid architectures, AMD's Ryzen 7000 launch provides our first look into how the next era of CPUs will play out.

Read more
All the games that support AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution
A woman wielding a weapon jumps out of red smoke.

AMD's FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) is here, promising up to a 2.5 times performance increase in supported games across Nvidia and AMD graphics cards. Not only are old and new games alike getting FSR support, but AMD is also improving FSR itself, which is now in version 2.0. Although FSR 2.0 doesn't always look quite as good as Nvidia's Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS), it has better support for GPUs from both graphics companies and for most will provide about the same image quality as Nvidia's upscaler.

At the moment, the vast majority of games that support FSR use version 1.0, but that's only because version 2.0 is much newer. Over the coming months, many games will be adding FSR 2.0 to its graphics options.
AMD FSR 2.0 games available now
Deathloop

Read more