@@BOO_DOGG3 hmm. I would not know how/what to adjust for streaming, I do not stream. I do also play on a 77" LG C1 thur PS5, XBOX and PC and out of all of them I notice that PS5 seems to have the best HDR implementation to my eye. This seems to be true when on my monior as well. Sometimes games can look too dark, even on PS5. PS5 does have system level HDR settings. I would suggest playing around with that if u have not already. U can adjust HDR in there prior to tuning it in game/per game. Best of Luck!
Imma have to try this Virtual Super Resolution feature. You know I love my 1440p setting. It is the sweet spot of gaming on the Series X and pc. Everything just looks and plays great!
Oh yeah it is cool. I use it all the time. Nvidia has had it for years. It's called DSR (Dynamic Super Resolution) it lets you multiply your monitor resolution essentially all the way up to 4 times. On top of that they also have a deep learning option that's twice as efficient according to Nvidia (it's what I use) essentially dumping some of the load to the tensor cores using their ai algorithms and stuff. There's a ton of options on both the Radeon and the Nvidia Control Panels. On the Radeon side its definitely more user friendly but Nvidia has all the same stuff in it. It's under the Manage 3D settings. Than there's also the Nvidia Inspector which is another software that lets you do some pretty cool stuff but I havent really checked it out yet.
It's also not a 7900XT feature. It's a driver level feature so any Radeon or Nvidia cards can use it. Obviously it only makes sense to use if you have the GPU headroom. It's really cool if you have a game with DLSS or FSR too and downsample it from a higher resolution and than use DLSS or FSR it can give some good results because for all intents and purposes DLS or FSR is reconstructing the image from a 4K or 6K or 8K resolution with more information to be able to reconstruct a more accurate better anti aliased image. Technically
I'm pondering about joining Team Red next gen and this looks VERY good. VSR is similar to DSR but for a non-integer scale, it blows DSR out of the water, I mean, if you want a image like this video, you'd have to DSR from 5k to 1440p (4x), not 4k, costly on performance. There is DLSDR now too, but I always prefer raw pixels, Al looks weird to me and has strange behaviors.
this feature is so good im using rx 580 when palying bf1 high on 1080p i only got around 30 fps but with virstual super resolutiom i change my screen native to 2k and i got around 70 fps on 2k wow btw its work with every game and make your monitor looks expensive
I have amd, but i had nvidia card, and they also have this is called DSR, and there is 2 versions of that, old one brute force, and new one that is Dynamic learning, they are both in same settings in control panel tho
@Frogboyx1Gaming I need genuine help. I have fsr and vsr with gpu upscaling enabled. I game with a ntive 4k 120hz samsung 65 inch oled tv panel. So with all of these settings enabled I downscaled my os resolution from 4k into 1440p but everything is still visually in 4k even though I confirmed the panel is operating at a 1440p setting. Now when I play tlou my adrenaline will pop up and it will tell me "Fsr active upscaling from 1440-4k" I tested it over and over with native 4k and vsr/fsr enabled with 0 fidelity lost in fact somehow I gain more fidelity. I am genuinely confused. My pc is using less resources while still keeping my os and games in 4k with 0 fidelity lost. What sort of sorcery is going on bro.
essentially your VSR is now disabled since u're using Hypr-RX. RSR is now overwriting VSR. VSR = downscale. RSR = Upscale. What happen was, RSR is now ignoring your VSR resolution and Upscaling your 1440p game to 4k native screen.
You could do this in the Nvidea panel too lol. Plus, you could use dlss with it as well to increase performance and it will still look better than native 1440p. How did you not know about this
@@frogboyx1Gaming and in theory that would make games look better than native 1440p? I'm kind of new with all these technologies. I watched all your videos and bought the same card. I have a 1080p monitor and now it's the only thing I have to upgrade. I know this card can play some games in 4k but I also want some futureproof in 1440p. Choosing a monitor and new resolution it's giving me a headache
@@lucashernandez922 your best bet would be a 1440p monitor (not less than than 24 inch) and at least 144 hz capability. Then if the specific game allows you can use vsr to play the game at 4k on a 1440p monitor.
Ive got an old 1024x768p 75hz plasma nezt to my 1440p monitor for movies and tv. This feature makes it so much nicer to use for games.
I absolutely love this feature. I use it on my 1080p TV with my Rx 6600 and it's looking really good
i have same specs. what res do you set your VSR, 2k or 4k? which is best for our 1080p panel
Image quality of your vid is much better than the last few so that’s good. Check out your HDR though, it’s rather dark.
How do you check your HDR to lighten it a bit better🧐🤔 ( I stream off my LG C2 42' Oled TV/Monitor but I stream thru PC thru console 👨🏽💻
@@BOO_DOGG3 hmm. I would not know how/what to adjust for streaming, I do not stream.
I do also play on a 77" LG C1 thur PS5, XBOX and PC and out of all of them I notice that PS5 seems to have the best HDR implementation to my eye. This seems to be true when on my monior as well.
Sometimes games can look too dark, even on PS5. PS5 does have system level HDR settings. I would suggest playing around with that if u have not already. U can adjust HDR in there prior to tuning it in game/per game.
Best of Luck!
Imma have to try this Virtual Super Resolution feature. You know I love my 1440p setting. It is the sweet spot of gaming on the Series X and pc. Everything just looks and plays great!
I think nvidia has dsr factors to do similar thing, but yea adrenaline is way more user friendly, def prefer it over nvidias control panel
Oh yeah it is cool. I use it all the time. Nvidia has had it for years. It's called DSR (Dynamic Super Resolution) it lets you multiply your monitor resolution essentially all the way up to 4 times. On top of that they also have a deep learning option that's twice as efficient according to Nvidia (it's what I use) essentially dumping some of the load to the tensor cores using their ai algorithms and stuff.
There's a ton of options on both the Radeon and the Nvidia Control Panels. On the Radeon side its definitely more user friendly but Nvidia has all the same stuff in it. It's under the Manage 3D settings. Than there's also the Nvidia Inspector which is another software that lets you do some pretty cool stuff but I havent really checked it out yet.
It's also not a 7900XT feature. It's a driver level feature so any Radeon or Nvidia cards can use it. Obviously it only makes sense to use if you have the GPU headroom. It's really cool if you have a game with DLSS or FSR too and downsample it from a higher resolution and than use DLSS or FSR it can give some good results because for all intents and purposes DLS or FSR is reconstructing the image from a 4K or 6K or 8K resolution with more information to be able to reconstruct a more accurate better anti aliased image. Technically
I'm pondering about joining Team Red next gen and this looks VERY good. VSR is similar to DSR but for a non-integer scale, it blows DSR out of the water, I mean, if you want a image like this video, you'd have to DSR from 5k to 1440p (4x), not 4k, costly on performance. There is DLSDR now too, but I always prefer raw pixels, Al looks weird to me and has strange behaviors.
AMD > Nvidia 👀
this feature is so good im using rx 580 when palying bf1 high on 1080p i only got around 30 fps but with virstual super resolutiom i change my screen native to 2k and i got around 70 fps on 2k wow btw its work with every game and make your monitor looks expensive
explain to me how can you use that, i have a rx590 and it says ''unavailable''
I have amd, but i had nvidia card, and they also have this is called DSR, and there is 2 versions of that, old one brute force, and new one that is Dynamic learning, they are both in same settings in control panel tho
@nikolygtx8848 yeah I am aware of DSR and DLSR
@Frogboyx1Gaming I need genuine help. I have fsr and vsr with gpu upscaling enabled. I game with a ntive 4k 120hz samsung 65 inch oled tv panel. So with all of these settings enabled I downscaled my os resolution from 4k into 1440p but everything is still visually in 4k even though I confirmed the panel is operating at a 1440p setting. Now when I play tlou my adrenaline will pop up and it will tell me "Fsr active upscaling from 1440-4k" I tested it over and over with native 4k and vsr/fsr enabled with 0 fidelity lost in fact somehow I gain more fidelity. I am genuinely confused. My pc is using less resources while still keeping my os and games in 4k with 0 fidelity lost. What sort of sorcery is going on bro.
You have HYPR-RX enabled so switching to 1440p is enabling RSR at a driver level to upscale to 4k
essentially your VSR is now disabled since u're using Hypr-RX.
RSR is now overwriting VSR.
VSR = downscale.
RSR = Upscale.
What happen was, RSR is now ignoring your VSR resolution and Upscaling your 1440p game to 4k native screen.
Great video Andrew
Wish AMD had a DLDSR version of VSR, buuuuuuuuut it doesn't work with DSC so maybe not lol
While Nvidia is playing checkers, AMD is owning chess
You could do this in the Nvidea panel too lol. Plus, you could use dlss with it as well to increase performance and it will still look better than native 1440p. How did you not know about this
Well he is still pretty new to pc gaming. I think for him he was thinking that nvidia is suppose to be better than amd so he switched.
Look how easy it was to find and enable on the AMD software.
So if I buy a 4k monitor, I can play the game at 1440p and theres a way to upscale to 4k without loosing quality?
You would buy a 1440p monitor then downsample from 4k to 1440p
@@frogboyx1Gaming and in theory that would make games look better than native 1440p? I'm kind of new with all these technologies. I watched all your videos and bought the same card. I have a 1080p monitor and now it's the only thing I have to upgrade. I know this card can play some games in 4k but I also want some futureproof in 1440p. Choosing a monitor and new resolution it's giving me a headache
@@lucashernandez922 your best bet would be a 1440p monitor (not less than than 24 inch) and at least 144 hz capability. Then if the specific game allows you can use vsr to play the game at 4k on a 1440p monitor.
That's why people don't know why amd is good
Amd is not about fps its about less lag
Why are my fps capped at 30 after enabling vsr?
Shouldn't be capping it.
It happened when i set 4k in rdr2
It’s a shame your videos upload Initially at 360p and I can’t tell what your on about lol 😆
Cool. :)