@Deshong04 You and me both with the new super duper ray tracing mode. I have the RTX 2060, which is one of the first RTX cards. Normal ray tracing has to cap my fps at 30, so I don't play around with it anyway. IMO games without ray tracing are extremely pretty nowadays anyway. And I can't say I care enough about the different to drop several hundreds of dollars on a new GPU.
Nvidia started talking about the DLSS 3 technology right after I bought a 3080 Ti. (It took forever for me to actually buy one)
It's a bit annoying when your card is obsolete right after you buy it.
But it turns out I don't need it.
The difference between Ray Tracing on and off is too subtle for how much the cards cost and and the performance hit by using the feature.
For me I have to see the differences side by side for it even to register. I would rather have a silky smooth frame rate in a game that still looks great without ray-tracing. I don't want any lag while racing through downtown on my motorcycle. There isn't time to admire the glassy reflections in water puddles anyway. That's the only difference that really stands out to me. The rest is too subtle.
Comments
Nvidia started talking about the DLSS 3 technology right after I bought a 3080 Ti. (It took forever for me to actually buy one)
It's a bit annoying when your card is obsolete right after you buy it.
But it turns out I don't need it.
The difference between Ray Tracing on and off is too subtle for how much the cards cost and and the performance hit by using the feature.
For me I have to see the differences side by side for it even to register. I would rather have a silky smooth frame rate in a game that still looks great without ray-tracing. I don't want any lag while racing through downtown on my motorcycle. There isn't time to admire the glassy reflections in water puddles anyway. That's the only difference that really stands out to me. The rest is too subtle.