
Team NVIDIA has announced that they're bringing DLSS 4 support to a handful of games this week, and I suspect you'll recognize a few of them right out of the gate. In conjunction with a driver update we've got a huge multi frame generation update for Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, Dead Take, and Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma and more. Additionally, 7 Days To Die now has support for DLSS Super Resolution. In addition, we also have our first look at some impressive path-traced effects being added to EA SPORTS F1 25. You can get a much deeper look at what's coming, as well as some sweet trailers at the official announcement site if you want to know more.
NVIDIA is also releasing an update for their GeForce Game Ready Drivers, optimizing for Mafia: The Old Country ahead of the upcoming launch. Add to that an update for Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and a whopping 62 G-SYNC Compatible displays to include Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) and more. Again, we turn to the announcement page for more info.
- Clair Obscur: Expedition 33: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is one of the year’s highest rated games, and quickly sold several million copies. At launch, it featured support for DLSS Super Resolution and DLAA. Now, thanks to a new update Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 also includes support for DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, DLSS Frame Generation, and NVIDIA Reflex, enabling GeForce RTX 50 Series and GeForce RTX 40 Series gamers to further accelerate frame rates, and all GeForce RTX gamers to make the game even more responsive.
- Dead Take: Brave a luxurious and haunting mansion in Dead Take, a first-person psychological horror crafted by BAFTA-winning developer Surgent Studios, published by Pocketpair Publishing, and featuring the talents of renowned game actor Ben Starr. When Dead Take launches today, GeForce RTX gamers can activate DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, DLSS Frame Generation, and DLSS Super Resolution to accelerate and enhance their experience.
- Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma: Marvelous Inc. and XSEED Games' Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma takes players to the previously unseen lands of Azuma as an Earth Dancer, where they’ll embark on an epic adventure filled with thrilling combat, vast lands, a diverse cast, and four seasonal-themed villages and farms to rebuild with help from the locals. GeForce RTX gamers jumping into Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma can enable DLSS Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution, accelerating frame rates. And via NVIDIA app, GeForce RTX 50 Series owners can activate DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, for even faster performance.
- F1® 25: EA SPORTS invites players to take the lead as a new chapter of Formula 1® begins with EA SPORTS F1® 25, an official game of the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship™. Players will experience the emotional highs and lows in the latest instalment of the fan-favourite story mode, Braking Point, with Konnersport now battling for championships, as a dramatic event throws the team into chaos.
- 7 Days to Die: Set in a brutally unforgiving post-apocalyptic world overrun by the undead, 7 Days to Die is an open-world game that is a unique combination of first-person shooter, survival horror, tower defense, and role-playing games that has been purchased by over 20 million gamers. A recent, major update upgraded the popular game with DLSS Super Resolution, and DLAA, giving GeForce RTX players the choice to either maximize performance, or amp up image quality. To enable DLAA, set “Upscaler Mode” to “DLSS,” and under “Upscaler Preset” select “Native AA.”
Finally, NVIDIA has also announced that, as of October 2025, they'll be pushing one final update for GPUs based on Maxwell (GeForce 700 series), Pascal (GeForce 900 series) and Volta architectures (Titan and GTX 10 series). Said another way, they're ending support for their older non-RTX cards. Granted, these cards are anywhere from 8 to 11 years old, well beyond a reasonable amount of time to support a device, so good on them for keeping those alive for that long. They'll continue to receive security and maintenance updates, but future drivers won't have card-specific performance upgrades beyond ancillary improvements baked into the driver itself.