Interim conclusion about NIS in Ghost Recon Wildlands
The RTX 3080 Ti has enough power to at least reach the 60 FPS mark in native 4K resolution. After all! In combination with NIS – depending on the level – it goes up to just over 100 FPS, which is a lot more fun. If you want even more FPS, you have to turn down the settings even with an RTX 3080 Ti. You can do that, but in the end it’s up to you. If we look at the quality of NIS, then a direct comparison to AMD’s RSR becomes difficult, if not impossible. This is because NVIDIA leaves it up to the end user to decide to what extent they would like the re-sharpening. And that is exactly what makes a comparison so complicated.
So let’s see what NIS is capable of doing with a lot of seasoning and no seasoning at all (re-sharpening). For this purpose, I have compiled the gallery above with activated 80% sharpening and below without sharpening. Now everyone can make his own picture. As already mentioned several times, with a little time you will also get an adjustment regarding the re-sharpening. In the end, the result will be the same as with RSR. I am convinced of that! What I also noticed is that the HUD with NIS is somewhat more affected in terms of readability – than with RSR. This is most likely due to the lack of or exaggerated sharpening.
Too extreme sharpening clearly leads to a loss of quality in the end, which I don’t think anyone wants. This is especially annoying when moving dynamically. But the picture also becomes completely unusable in some cases when standing still, since not only the edges, but also the actual colors in the game are massively affected by the re-sharpening. However, if you omit sharpening entirely, the depth of field is missing and the image becomes increasingly blurry the further you reduce the render resolution.
Nevertheless, the image with NIS (1440p) or NIS (1080p) looks significantly better than the respective native resolution after upscaling (with sharpening disabled). And if you have a good 4K monitor, such as the LG 27GN950, you should not reduce the resolution under any circumstances! I don’t think I need to torture you any longer with more videos and pictures of NIS. I think the essence came across! Then we close for today. Last page please!
- 1 - Einführung und Testsetup
- 2 - AMD RSR Leistungsdaten
- 3 - Leistungmessungen im Spiel
- 4 - Nativer und dynamischer Bildvergleich
- 5 - Detailvergleich 4K nativ vs. RSR Upscaling
- 6 - AMD RSR Zwischenfazit
- 7 - NVIDIA NIS Leistungsdaten
- 8 - NIS vs. nativer dynamischer Bildvergleich
- 9 - NIS Upscaling im Detailvergleich
- 10 - NIS Zwischenfazit
- 11 - Zusammenfassung und Fazit
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