Team Green just revealed its new Nvidia App – which replaces GeForce Experience – and it comes with a trick which is essentially the GPU maker’s take on a Windows 11 feature, namely Auto HDR.
Nvidia’s RTX HDR is an AI-powered filter which, like Microsoft’s Auto HDR, brings the benefit of HDR to plain old SDR games.
If you’ve got an HDR monitor, but you’re playing a game that doesn’t support HDR, then you aren’t getting the best mileage from your display in terms of visual quality.
So what these technologies do is take that SDR image and make an approximation of HDR for the gamer to enjoy on their supporting monitor.
Now, that won’t be as good as native HDR support, but it’s a lot better than nothing, and certainly a more vivid, punchy image than with just simple SDR.
As mentioned, this RTX HDR feature comes as part of the freshly revealed Nvidia App, and it’s compatible with Vulkan and DirectX games (from DX9 onwards). That new app offers a bunch of feature additions, alongside an overhauled interface (and Nvidia has dropped the requirement to sign in which will go down well with the PC gaming community).
It’s still beta software right now, though, but the eventual idea is that this will be a one-stop-shop to replace the current Nvidia Control Panel and GeForce Experience (the latter of which was avoided by a fair few gamers, let’s be honest).
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Clearly this is great news for those with an HDR monitor, although it doesn’t come as a surprise, as there was a previous leak showing that Nvidia likely had such an Auto HDR-style feature waiting in the wings. So, that rumor was bang on the money.
There are a couple of notable caveats to be aware of, mind, notably that you need to have an RTX graphics card (the name RTX HDR gives that away) and you must be running Windows 11. As with Auto HDR, Windows 10 users are sadly left out in the tundra (literally, being saddled with somewhat bleaker images in SDR games than they could otherwise benefit from).
Of course, you must have an HDR monitor as noted, but those who don’t get a consolation prize called RTX Dynamic Vibrance. This can work with any display, whether it’s one of the best monitors out there replete with bells and whistles, or a bog standard screen, and again uses AI to pep up visual clarity and make colors pop more (while avoiding color crushing, Nvidia notes).
Based on Nvidia’s demos, RTX Dynamic Vibrance does make quite a difference, but as the name again indicates, this is for RTX graphics cards only. You can use these features on a per-game basis, or there’s a global switch for RTX HDR.
Whatever the case, Nvidia GPU owners will doubtless be keen to try out this new feature, as the aforementioned leak involved a mod that enabled RTX HDR in a pre-release state – and even in that form, some gamers reckoned it was better than Microsoft’s Auto HDR. Nvidia’s take can also be used with more PC games, to boot.
Via PC Gamer