Home / Tech News / Featured Tech News / Four more titles get DLSS upgrades and new games arrive for GeForce Now

Four more titles get DLSS upgrades and new games arrive for GeForce Now

Nvidia has dropped the next round of DLSS-supported titles, alongside a new batch of games for the GeForce Now cloud gaming service.

This week, Samson launches with DLSS Multi Frame Generation, ray‑traced effects, DLSS Ray Reconstruction, and DLSS Super Resolution that can be upgraded to DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution via the Nvidia app. Dawn of Defiance also arrives with DLSS 4 Multi Frame Generation and optional upgrades to DLSS 4.5 via the Nvidia App override. Enlisted adds improved ray‑traced reflections, shadows, and ambient occlusion alongside new DLSS Ray Reconstruction support and an upgrade to DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution, and War Thunder’s Ninth Wave update optimises its ray‑traced effects, introduces DLSS Ray Reconstruction, and similarly upgrades DLSS Super Resolution to DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution.

On the GeForce Now side of things, Nvidia is bringing four more titles to the service, including:

  • Samson (New release on Steam, April 8, GeForce RTX 5080-ready)
  • Morbid Metal (New release on Steam, April 8, GeForce RTX 5080-ready)
  • DayZ (New release on Xbox, available on Game Pass, April 9)
  • Rayman: 30th Anniversary Edition (Steam and Ubisoft)

Aside from that, Starfield is also getting the upgrade to GeForce Now Ultimate's RTX 5080 powered servers.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: Are you picking up any of this week's new releases?

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Call of Duty COD

KitGuru Games: Predicting the Next Half a Decade of Call of Duty Releases

Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) famously once said: “The three absolutes in life are death, taxes and a new Call of Duty coming out every single year”. Sure enough, the US founding father has yet to be proven wrong, with Activision and a dozen studios having ensured that come the tail-end of any given year, there will be a new COD ready to release. And so, what can we expect from the franchise later this year? What about 2027, 2028 or even 2030? By looking back at the past two decades of Call of Duty games, their trends, progression and regression, I believe I can predict the next 5 years worth of annual COD entries.