Difference between revisions of "FSR - FidelityFX Super Resolution"
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
== Setup with Gamescope == | == Setup with Gamescope == | ||
You can enable FSR in [[Gamescope]] with <code>gamescope -U --fsr-sharpness 4 --</code> as command prefix. 4 is an example value, replace it by something between 0 (max) and 20 (min). This also works for native games. | You can enable FSR in [[Gamescope]] with <code>gamescope -U --fsr-sharpness 4 --</code> as command prefix. 4 is an example value, replace it by something between 0 (max) and 20 (min). This also works for native games. | ||
== FSR 2 == | |||
FSR 2 provides far better graphics quality than FSR 1. However, it is needs support from the game. If the game only supports DLSS, you can often use a mod to translate DLSS to FSR 2. |
Revision as of 02:18, 22 November 2022
FSR can be used to get better performance in games at the cost of visuals. It is comparable with DLSS, but can be applied to every game. There are several modes from ultra quality to maximum performance. For example, it is possible to double your FPS with very little visual loss. FSR only works if the game is GPU limited (your GPU runs at 100%).
Note that the image degradation is noticeable. Full HD + ultra high graphics + FSR might not be worth it. However FHD + low settings + FSR with 60 FPS might be significantly better than having 30 FPS with the same settings and no FSR. The performance difference might be even bigger if your VRAM is not big enough. The image degradation is not as noticeable with high resolution, so 4k ultra high + FSR might fit your needs.
Setup with Wine
Basic setup
- Set
WINE_FULLSCREEN_FSR=1
as environment variable, or use the switch in Lutris/Bottles
- In game set your setting according to the table on page 10 of this document: For example, if you want to have Ultra Quality, and your output resolution (the resolution of your actualy monitor) is 1920x1080, you set your ingame resolution to 1477x831. Other resolutions also work, but you might get black bars if the aspect ratio is not the native one of your monitor. Setting your ingame resolution to your output resolution disables FSR.
- In game
- Enable anti aliasing (TAA, MSAA, FXAA, ...)
- Disable effects that generate noise (like Motion Blur, Blur, Chromatic Aberration, Sharpening, etc.)
- You need a patched version of Wine or Proton, for example the TKG, or GE version. Default versions in Lutris and Bottles work fine.
More configuration options
You can add more options with environment variables:
WINE_FULLSCREEN_FSR_STRENGTH=4
This sharpens the image. 4 is an example value. 0 is maximum sharpness, higher values mean less sharpening. (I think 5 is the maximum. If you know more, please edit this.) The default is 2 but this is probably too much for your game. Just experiment with different values.
WINE_VULKAN_NEGATIVE_MIP_BIAS=45
This results in textures with higher resolution. 45 is an example value. AMD recommends:
Quality Setting | MIP Bias |
---|---|
Ultra Quality | 38 |
Quality | 58 |
Balanced | 79 |
Performance | 100 |
WINE_VULKAN_BIAS_ALL_SAMPLER=1
This applies the MIP Bias to everything. 1 is enabled, 0 is disabled. This can result in weird game behaviour.
Examples
Setup with Gamescope
You can enable FSR in Gamescope with gamescope -U --fsr-sharpness 4 --
as command prefix. 4 is an example value, replace it by something between 0 (max) and 20 (min). This also works for native games.
FSR 2
FSR 2 provides far better graphics quality than FSR 1. However, it is needs support from the game. If the game only supports DLSS, you can often use a mod to translate DLSS to FSR 2.