![]() Now I seriously can’t believe anyone likes these constant visual issues that RTAO brings to the table. And yes, these visual issues are not present when you disable Ray Tracing. ![]() As a result of that, there isn’t any visual consistency in this game with RT On. This happens when approaching objects, and when you’re getting away from them. As you can see, shadows can form right in front of you, completely changing the way things look. In the following video, we highlight these visual issues. As such, with RT On, you’ll get AWFUL visual changes while exploring the environments. The problem here, however, is that the radius of the RTAO is really short. Ray Tracing in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor adds RTAO, RTGI on specific objects, and very few RT Reflections. For those wondering, the gameplay footage of this video is from the game’s latest version (with its latest patch applied). We also used Windows 10 64-bit, and the GeForce 531.68 driver. ![]() In fact, the game can look atrocious with Ray Tracing, and we highly recommend disabling it.īefore continuing, for our tests, we used an AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D, 32GB of DDR5 at 6000Mhz, and NVIDIA’s RTX 4090. The reality is that the Ray Tracing implementation in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor is not that good. ![]() Or at least that’s what some people want to make you believe. Now as you may have heard, Star Wars Jedi: Survivor can look “amazing” with Ray Tracing. You know what? I’ve been sitting on this since the game came out. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |