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AMD FSR (FidelityFX Super Resolution): Everything you need to know

AMD’s FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) is a supersampling feature available in a large swath of games. It has a simple goal: Improving gaming performance on the best graphics cards. To help you understand how it works and why you should turn it on your games, we rounded up everything you need to know about AMD FSR.

It works by rendering your game at a lower resolution, but the magic of FSR comes in the upscaling. It attempts to fill in missing details to make your game look like it’s running at native resolution, just with a massive boost in performance.

What is AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution?

A depiction of AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution.

FSR is AMD’s answer to Nvidia’s Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS). Like DLSS, FSR is a supersampling feature that makes a game look like it’s rendering at a higher resolution than it really is. So, the engine may render the game at 1080p, and then FSR steps in to fill in the missing pixels to make it look like a 1440p output.

There are now two versions of FSR, and FSR 2.0 is much better than the original. For now, most games only support FSR 1.0, but the second version should be the default moving forward. There are several differences between them, which we’ll dig into in the next section.

Compared to DLSS, there’s one major difference between both versions of FSR. DLSS requires an Nvidia RTX 20- or 30-series GPU, while FSR works with graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia. Official support goes back to GTX 10-series and Radeon RX 400 series, though FSR can still work on older hardware.

In addition, the source code is available for free to developers on AMD’s GPUOpen platform, and it’s available through the Unreal Engine 4 and Unity game engines. Basically, any developer, regardless of their budget or connections, can get FSR working in their games.

FSR is only available in games where the developers have chosen to include it, though. AMD offers its Radeon Super Resolution feature specifically for Radeon GPUs. This is basically FSR 1.0 available through your AMD driver, allowing you to apply upscaling to any game as long as you have a supported GPU.

FidelityFX Super Resolution quality modes

A comparison of AMD FSR in Deathloop.

FSR comes with different quality modes to adjust how much performance you want versus how good you want your game to look. Each quality mode provides a scaling factor that will upscale the internal resolution to what’s outputted on your display. Here are the quality modes for FSR 1.0:

  • Ultra Quality — 1.3x scaling
  • Quality — 1.5x scaling
  • Balanced — 1.7x scaling
  • Performance — 2x scaling

The scaling goes in both dimensions, so you’d multiply the vertical and horizontal resolution to figure out the final output. For example, if you ran the Performance mode on a 4K monitor with a resolution of 3840 x 2160, it would render the game at 1920 x 1080.

FSR 2.0 has slightly different quality modes. Instead of an Ultra Quality mode, it starts with Quality and matches the same scaling factors as FSR 1.0. Game developers have access to an optional Ultra Performance mode with FSR 2.0, however. This mode provides 3x scaling, but AMD says it won’t be available in every FSR 2.0 game.

What GPUs support FidelityFX Super Resolution?

Three graphics cards on a gray background.

FSR stands out over DLSS due to its cross-vendor support. You can use an AMD or Nvidia graphics card, but only the last few generations are officially supported. FSR should still work on older GPUs, but you may encounter issues or decreased performance. Here are the graphics cards that support FSR 1.0:

  • AMD Radeon 6000 series
  • AMD Radeon 6000M series
  • AMD Radeon 5000 series
  • AMD Radeon 5000M series
  • AMD Radeon VII graphics
  • AMD Radeon RX Vega series
  • AMD Radeon 600 series
  • AMD Radeon RX 500 series
  • AMD Radeon RX 480/470/460 graphics
  • AMD Ryzen desktop processors with AMD Radeon graphics
  • AMD Ryzen mobile processors with Radeon graphics
  • Nvidia GeForce RTX 30-series
  • Nvidia GeForce RTX 20-series
  • Nvidia GeForce 16-series
  • Nvidia GeForce 10-series

FSR 2.0 supports the same graphics cards technically. AMD says the requirements for an optimal experience are a little more strict, though. You can still use it with an Nvidia or AMD GPU, but AMD recommends a slightly more powerful graphics cards for higher resolutions. You can see the recommended GPUs in the table below.

FSR 2.0 supported graphics cards.
AMD

How does FidelityFX Super Resolution work?

Explanation of AMD's Super Resolution technology.

FSR 1.0 and 2.0 work much differently, but they’re built around the same core. Both supersampling features use the Lanczos algorithm for upscaling. It starts by feeding the upscaler a low-resolution image, which is then blown up with extra detail based on the algorithm. FSR performs a sharpening pass afterward to restore a little more detail.

That’s how it works at a high level, but the critical difference between FSR 1.0 and FSR 2.0 comes down to anti-aliasing. With FSR 1.0, the game would perform anti-aliasing before the upscaling was applied, which lead to much worse image quality when the game had a poor anti-aliasing implementation.

FSR 2.0 changes that. It doesn’t require anti-aliasing, instead performing Temporal Anti-Aliasing (TAA) after the upscaling is done. This is similar to how DLSS works, and it’s why the Temporal Super Resolution (TSR) feature in Ghostwire Tokyo looks as good as it does.

A graph of how FSR 2.0 works.

Compared to DLSS, the big change with FSR is that it’s not accelerated by AI. DLSS requires dedicated Tensor cores on RTX graphics cards to run an AI model that assists in upscaling. FSR is part of the game’s render pipeline, allowing it to work with graphics cards from different vendors.

What games support FidelityFX Super Resolution?

A scene from Godfall.

There’s only one game that supports FSR 2.0 at the time of writing: Deathloop. AMD says several other games will receive support soon, including titles like Forspoken, Eve Online, and Grounded. 

The library of FSR 1.0 is much larger, and AMD as well as modders are patching it into new titles constantly. Here’s the full list of games that support FSR 1.0:

  • Deathloop
  • Far Cry 6
  • God of War
  • Godfall
  • Horizon Zero Dawn
  • Resident Evil Village
  • Terminator Resistance
  • The Rift Breaker
  • World War Z
  • Amid Evil
  • Anno 1800
  • Arcadegeddon
  • Assetto Corsa Competizione
  • Back 4 Blood
  • Baldur’s Gate 3
  • Black Desert
  • Call of Duty: Vanguard
  • Century: Age of Ashes
  • Chernobylite
  • Cyberpunk 2077
  • Death Stranding
  • Deep Rock Galactic
  • Dota 2
  • Dying Light 2
  • Edge of Eternity
  • Edge of the Abyss: Awaken
  • Elite Dangerous: Odyssey
  • Enlisted
  • Evil Genius 2
  • F1 2021
  • Farming Simulator 22
  • Gamedec
  • Ghostrunner
  • Ghostwire: Tokyo
  • Grounded
  • Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice
  • Hot Wheels Unleashed
  • Icarus
  • Keo
  • Kingshunt
  • Lego Builder’s Journey
  • Marvel’s Avengers
  • Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy
  • Myst
  • Myth of Empires
  • Necromunda: Hired Gun
  • No Man’s Sky
  • Phantasy Star Online 2
  • Quake 2 RTX
  • Ready or Not
  • Second Extinction
  • Shadow Warrior 3
  • The Medium
  • Undying
  • Warhammer Vermintide 2
  • Workshop simulator
  • World of Warcraft: Shadowlands
  • World of Warships

If you want to see FSR in your favorite game, you can request it through the AMD FSR wishlist.

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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…
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