AMD runs out of FSR 4 in 007 First Light while NVIDIA adds DLSS 4.5 with dynamic frame generation
The manufacturers of GPUs They have updated their drivers to offer support for the latest title of the popular detective 007an adventure called First Light. NVIDIA launched its drivers 610.49 WHQLwhile Intel did the same with his version 32.0.101.8824this time in an edition BETAalthough both added support for this game. amd He already did it a few days ago, although by surprise this popular title does not include support for its latest FSR 4.1 technology.
007 First Light is not compatible with FSR 4.1 despite including FSR 3.1.5
As we see at ComputerBase, the game 007 First Light includes support for the oldest FSR 3.1.5and although practically all games compatible with this version would also be compatible with FSR 4it doesn’t work in this game. The game does not natively support FSR 4and the option to force this new version from the driver does not work. This is because the developer has enabled support for FSR 3.1then the software amd you cannot replace the library with version 4.
NVIDIA does offer compatibility with DLSS 4.5 and future improvements by update
However, 007 First Light It comes with a multitude of options compatible with the technologies of NVIDIA. This PC version is compatible with DLSS 4.5which implies Super Resolution and Dynamic Multi Frame Generationalthough it does not have Ray Tracing neither Ray Reconstructionscheduled for this coming summer via an update.
NVIDIA sponsorship could explain the absence of FSR 4 and XeSS
Maybe it has something to do with NVIDIA has sponsored this game, giving it away with some card purchases RTX 50 Seriessince it includes the latest technologies NVIDIA and some others scheduled with a next update. At least amd has been luckier than Intelsince the game It is not compatible with XeSS in any of its versions.
Juan Antonio Soto
I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I broke down my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and 210MB of hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles I write for Geeknetic. I dedicate most of my free time to video games, contemporary and retro, on the more than 20 consoles I have, in addition to the PC.
