HomeHardwareNewsGod of War (2018)

God of War now has AMD FSR 2.0 support on PCBecomes third game to welcome AMD’s updated upscaler

Becomes third game to welcome AMD’s updated upscaler

Kratos speaks to his son Atreus on a small boat in God of War.

A surpriseGod of WarPC update has made it one of just three games to supportAMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) 2.0. This significantly improved upscaling option,introduced a few weeks back in Deathloop(and more recently making it toFarming Simulator 22), completely replaces God of War’s FSR 1.0 setting, giving Radeon GPU owners a performance booster that comes much closer toNvidia DLSSon quality.

God of War - Features Trailer | PCWatch on YouTube

God of War - Features Trailer | PC

Cover image for YouTube video

I’ve snapped a few comparison shots (see below), and when upscaling to 1440p, the difference between FSR 2.0 and DLSS’ respective highest quality settings is barely visible. Neither are quite as sharp as native 1440p, but it’s a visible improvement on FSR 1.0, which was clearly the blurrier of the two upscalers in Santa Monica Studios’ fatherly deity-puncher.

Ultra quality, FSR 2.0 at Quality (with sharpening at 0.5) upscaling to 2560x1440

Kratos stands in front of a skull-shaped stone in God of War. Shows AMD FSR 2.0 upscaling to 1440p.

Ultra quality, native 2560x1440

Kratos stands in front of a skull-shaped stone in God of War. Shows native 1440p resolution.

Ultra quality, DLSS at Quality (with sharpness at 35) upscaling to 2560x1440

Kratos stands in front of a skull-shaped stone in God of War. Shows DLSS upscaling to 1440p.

I also ran a quick series of benchmark tests on my personal PC (RTX 3090, Intel Core i9-10900K, 32GB DDR4) and found that FSR 2.0’s Quality setting more or less matches the performance boost of its DLSS equivalent. A combination of the Ultra graphics quality preset and native 1440p averaged 106fps, which rose to 115fps with FSR 2.0 and 118fps with DLSS.

That’s not quite as strong a showing for AMD’s tech as it had inDeathloop, where FSR 2.0 could go a few frames per second faster than DLSS, but it’s only a 3fps difference here. Considering DLSS is one of the reasons why Nvidia has so many of thebest graphics cards, it’s good to see that FSR is finally catching up. And whereas DLSS requires a relatively pricey RTX card, FSR 2.0 will work on a lot of older, weaker and cheaper GPUs, including AMD Radeon and Nvidia GeForce models alike.

There are still loads more DLSS games than FSR 2.0 games, but the latter is slowly making up ground;EVE Online,Forspoken,Grounded, andMicrosoft Flight Simulatorwill all get their own FSR 2.0 updates at some point.