A few months ago I said I was gonna do a video on how to upscale your screen resolution from your regular/standard resolution you have with NVIDIA. So here's a tutorial on how to do just that. DSR - Dynamic Super Resolution
The only person with a video to actually explain this correctly instead of everyone thinking their NVIDIA card is working automatically. Thank you for this video, my 3080TI looks twice as good now minimal loss in fps.
i would just like to let you know that this helped me out so much after i did a clean instal for the driver update, and not my other monitor fits much better with my main monitor, thank you
Thanks mate! now smaller things are much sharper. Helps me a lot while doing speaker engineering as sometimes many thin lines from measurements are very close to each other. Things are visible much better now!
I seriously doubted this like crazy when I saw your settings, but... I tried them out.. my Win11 is actually running much smoother now. and at 240hz with a 1080 and vrr and gsync.. seems to work.. We'll for how long... Windows 11 or even Win10 the last year or two has a way of fucking up my screen after a while... But.. for now.. it's looking good.
How to enable it on rx560 4gb? Never showed the option ever in years. Native of the tv 1024x768. It used to work on r9 270 till it was discontinued on a driver update
Hey DTA2, I have a question. The DSR factors go up to a max of 4.00x - so the original reso they use is 960x540. Does that mean 4k is the max u can DSR upscale to? Will connecting a 4K display increase that original reso and hence allow for upscaling to greater than 4K resos?
1080p screens can only upscale to 4K, anything lower cannot unless NVIDIA has released some sort of update that allows that. Anything higher than 1080p can upscale beyond 4K, my 2k monitor can upscale to 6K. and 8K screen would upscale to 32K if possible by NVIDIA. I have no clue what their max DSR resolution is as I do not own an 8K screen.
If a monitor has a native resolution that's lower than what you want, you will only be able to achieve high refresh rate at that native resolution, anything higher than it and it will default to 60 or 30. Not sure if there is monitors that can have the same refresh rate at lower resolutions but I know for higher ones it won't work as that's a limitation of your screen.
Hey, i got 2060 rtx whit a monitor whit 2560 * 1440 p. And 144hz which the monitor can overclock it self. What du you reccomed i shold ude? I only play warzone and pubg ish game. And i have all of those almost off, just cuz i teste out som sugestgent from ppl on youtube.. But now when i scope inn on a building 200 meeters away bearøy, its takes all from 0-3 sec before the building textsure loades in 😓😓 anu tips i wil love🙏❤️🙌💯
I'm using a 19" monitor, 1440x900 resolution I just built a new pc with 12100F + RTX 3070. Can I upgrade the 1440x900 screen resolution to higher. Please help me.
@@IAMGHOST_IND Not sure what to tell you there, my only option I can say is to keep your graphics card updated? Could also be that if it's a prebuilt it's possible that's locked away.
I think DSR is not a very good feature, I try to play 1440p on 1080p monitor but the image when I turn the camera in games isn't that smooth compared to native resolution, don't know why
@@gdawg-in9ny lower the smoothness make the game looks pixelated but increase the smoothness make the game looks more blurrier than 1080p native. don't know why
If you have a display higher than 60hz then it’s most likely your refresh rate reset and you can’t change to a higher one out of your native resolution
I don't know if there's monitors that allows refresh rates to be the same in lower resolutions but I know for a fact that you can't keep a high refresh rate for higher resolutions, in which case when changing the resolution of your screen it will switch to a default lower refresh rate such as 59/60hz or 24/29/30hz.
Mess around with the sharpness settings and see which suits you better to read. By increasing your resolution it means you have a lot more virtual pixels, things will become smaller to sync in with the size of your resolution. This does not affect your view but it affects your recordings, images, projects, etc.
I was trying red dead at 4k with dsr on my 1440p monitor it looked pretty bad still all the trees are unclear. Do I just need a good monitor because it should not be a problem with my gpu cause I have a 4070ti super
Hi, I have a problem. When I put the 4k on my FHD monitor it becomes all fuzzy and it doesn’t even seem to get any smaller, just fuzzy. Can you tell me why?
@@HyperionZero If i change the resolution by Nvidia Control Panel it becomes smaller but it is too fuzzy. I tried to change sharpness but it is still too fuzzy and small
Hi anyone to help me, I run x3 4k TV so 11520x2160 terrible for my gpu (rtx3080), how can we enable Nvidia DSR when we run Nvidia surround (seems not available on nvidia settings)
Supersample is the act of virtually increasing the resolution of games, although it won't affect what you're seeing on your screen unless you lower it below the threshold of your screen resolution it will affect anyone who sees your screen outside such as when you stream or record.
Graphics Card not being from NVIDIA. Update your NVIDIA Graphics Card. Update Windows (Some systems need the latest update to get DSR working). System manufacturer might've locked that feature away. If you have a prebuilt, it's possible the code set into the prebuilt might keep DSR locked away. An Integrated Graphics Card instead of a dedicated one.
So i have rtx 3090 i want play far cry 6 ... Ubisoft said rtx 3080 can handle 4k 30fps i want play at 60 at least on ultra... Can i use dsr? To achieve 60 fps and not loosing too much resolution?
If your aspect ratio doesn't correspond to your screen native aspect ratio, you'll end up seeing black borders or if the game isn't showing up at all trying f11, alt+tab, or win+up_arrow_key.
No unless you plan on keeping the resolution the way it is and then have all of Windows zoomed in to fit your native resolution meanwhile in the settings of some games you can set them to whatever resolution you have DSR on
All you have to do is turn on dsr but NOT activate it natively, when you go into your game go to where you choose resolution and pick whichever one you're after, dsr will turn on in the game play but not natively.
Not really if it's a pretty big monitor, if it's a small one however it shouldn't be too noticeable. Doing that just means you're taking pixels away from your regular resolution you should be at, less pixels = better performance aka performance at the cost of quality.
@@KingofL85 ok i found it but i dont like the way text looks. I think i keep it only for games. I have a 1080p 34 inch display and games looked a little fuzzy but with this it looks great
It actually does. You won't get to see the higher resolution beyond your screen limits yourself however other people will. This takes up more resources on the other hand. DSR is not what you're thinking about DLSS. If your screen can only handle 1920x1080, you won't see a difference by setting your screen or game's resolution to 2560x1440 or 3840x2160. Once again, this only affects what other people see, not what you yourself see.
How to enable it on rx560 4gb? Never showed the option ever in years. Native of the tv 1024x768. It used to work on r9 270 till it was discontinued on a driver update
DSR is an NVIDIA option, if your card is an AMD there should be something called super virtual resolution (VSR) at least that's what a comment in this video said.