Upscaling technologies like and AMD's [[link]] FSR have rapidly become almost essential for playing modern games at decent frame rates with the eye candy turned on. Problem is, support for the various upscalers varies from [[link]] game to game. But now there's a new tool that makes it easier than every to inject your upscaler of choice into your favourite game. in Cyberpunk? You betcha, though with caveats.
, a new tool that allows you to swap in almost any upscaling technology. Its basic requirement is that the game in question already supports either DLSS 2 or higher, FSR 2 or higher or XeSS.
| Row 0 - Cell 0 | Amid Evil | Ghost of Tsushima | Senua's Saga: Hellblade 2 |
| Row 1 - Cell 0 | Atomic Heart | Hitman: World of Assassination | Silent Hill 2 Remake |
| Row 2 - Cell 0 | Avowed | Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered | Shadow of the Tomb Raider |
| Row 3 - Cell 0 | Baldur's Gate 3 | Jusant | The Outer Worlds Spacer Choice Edition |
| Row 4 - Cell 0 | Black Myth: Wukong | Kingdom Come: Deliverance II | Tiny Tina's Wonderlands |
| Row 5 - Cell 0 | Cyberpunk 2077 | Lies of P | Tokyo Xtreme Racer |
| Row 6 - Cell 0 | Dragon's Dogma II | Like A Dragon: Infinite Wealth | Uncharted: Legacy of Thieves Collection |
| Row 7 - Cell 0 | Final Fantasy VII Rebirth | Postal 4 | The Witcher 3 Next Gen |
| Row 8 - Cell 0 | Final Fantasy XVI | Red Dead Redemption 2 | Row 8 - Cell 3 |
On paper, then, this is a really handy tool. For instance, AMD's new FSR 4 ML-powered upscaler is a huge advance. But it's not officially supported in very many games. Enabling it with OptiScaler significantly widens your options.
Of course, OptiScaler does nothing to change the fact that you still need an RDNA 4 AMD GPU for FSR 4, that means either an , which only went on sale last week and are pretty much sold out right now.
Still, the basic notion of an easy-to-use tool that allows you to swap between the scaler of your choice, rather than some deal the developer has done with a [[link]] GPU vendor, is very appealing.
It's especially helpful for making AMD GPUs more appealing, given support for FSR and especially FSR 4 isn't as widespread as that for Nvidia's DLSS. Of course, it's also good news for Nvidia GPU owners.
For those few titles that only have FSR support, they may now be able to swap in higher-quality DLSS upscaling. In short, everyone wins with a tool like this.
It could also come in handy for, well, handhelds with AMD APUs like the . For now, no AMD-based handheld gaming PC supports FSR 4. So, the ability to swap in, say, XeSS 1.3 could be very handy.
Anyway, being able to swap around between upscalers beyond those offered as standard by a given game and do it with relative ease is definitely a game changer. In the long run, you'd hope to be able to use the scaler of your choice from launch with any new game. But until that happens, tools like this will be invaluable.