Skip to main content

To celebrate its milestone, here are the best (and worst) examples of RTX in games

Nvidia just passed a huge milestone with RTX. The feature set is now available in over 500 games or apps, which is a massive accomplishment considering how big of a controversy the RTX platform was when Nvidia introduced it five years ago. We’ve come a long way since Battlefield V and Quake 2 RTX, so it’s a good chance to look back.

There are over 500 games and apps with RTX features now, and that breaks down like this: 366 games with DLSS, 138 games with ray tracing, and 7 games with path tracing. In addition, there are 75 apps with ray tracing and 14 apps with DLSS. Out of that huge pool, here are the best (and worst) examples of what RTX has to offer for PC gamers.

The best: Portal RTX

Portal RTX running on the Surface Laptop Studio 2.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Portal RTX was the unofficial signal of second-gen RTX tech. It’s the answer to how far RTX has come since Nvidia introduced Quake II RTX in 2019. Both are classic games, but while Quake II RTX felt like a tech demo with limited applications (especially considering the hardware at the time), Portal RTX felt like revitalizing a classic by utilizing path tracing and DLSS 3 to make an old game feel completely new.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

It’s a good tech demo as well, but booting up and playing Portal RTX feels like playing a brand new game. The use of all-new materials makes Aperture Science feel like a new location, which shines all the more with the bright lights of portals in the game.

This is one of the best showcases of RTX because it wouldn’t be possible without RTX. Portal RTX is one of the most demanding games on PC, and it’s only possible to play due to DLSS 3. It’s a meeting of all of Nvidia’s RTX tech to create a new experience out of an old game, and that’s the perfect encapsulation of the feature set.

The worst: Final Fantasy XV

Final Fantasy XV's heroes stand on a grassy field.
Square Enix

Nvidia proudly markets some of the early DLSS games like Control and Shadow of the Tomb Raider now that they’ve been updated with new versions of the upscaling tech. Final Fantasy XV has been swept under the rug, though, and for good reason. At the time, it was mighty impressive to see an image reconstruction technique that didn’t look terrible. By today’s standards, Final Fantasy XV can’t hang.

It still uses DLSS 1.0, which utilized a model that required per-game training. It was also subject to more artifacts that don’t show up in newer versions of DLSS that use a generalized AI model. In Final Fantasy XV, that showed up as flickering and instability in the image, even compared to normal temporal anti-aliasing.

DLSS hadn’t quite gained the pedigree for performance improvements when Final Fantasy XV was introduced, either. It showed performance improvements on RTX 20-series GPUs, but nowhere near on the scale of the jumps we see with modern implementations of DLSS. Most disappointing is that we never got an update to DLSS in Final Fantasy XV. 

The best: Alan Wake 2

Alan Wake 2 running on the Samsung Odyssey OELD G9.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

I’ve never seen a game more beautiful than Alan Wake 2It’s one of only two titles using Nvidia’s DLSS 3.5 right now, which not only provides upscaling and frame generation, but also an AI-driven denoiser that makes path tracing in the game look stunning.

It’s a game that looks so stunning due to the lighting. If you zoom in on individual character models, they look good, but it’s the glimpses of light in a scene that stand out — how you can see reflections on a doughnut display case, or how red light bounces off the damp hair of your character.

Alan Wake 2 is very demanding, due in no small part to the path tracing it implements. It’s one of the prime examples of how this demanding rendering technique can pay off, though, and at acceptable levels of performance due to DLSS 3.5.

The worst: Atomic Heart

Player character electrocuting AI robots in Atomic Heart.
Mundfish

Atomic Heart is, by definition, not one of the worst showcases of RTX tech. And that’s because it doesn’t have much RTX tech. Nvidia showed off Atomic Heart when it introduced the first RTX GPUs in 2018, but the game didn’t arrive until 2023. Despite being the poster child for ray tracing for five years, the game launched without any ray tracing.

Worse, the game launched without so much as a peep from the developers or Nvidia. It was a game paraded around for years as a reason to buy an RTX GPU, and it arrived without that feature. It still included DLSS 2, but that’s not how Atomic Heart was billed.

It’s probably best to forget this one ever happened, anyway. Even months after releasing, the game still hasn’t received an update for ray tracing, and it even ripped music from the soundtrack of the 2018 film Annihilation without any credit. Not a good look for Nvidia or the developers.

The best: Minecraft RTX

Minecraft with RTX | Official Full Game Release Trailer

If you want to see what ray tracing can do for a game, turn ray tracing on in MinecraftIt feels like you’re playing a completely new game. The voxel-based world specifically known for not looking like a modern game suddenly comes alive like some sort of ray-traced masterpiece.

It’s not just a switch for ray tracing, either. Minecraft RTX includes a physically based rendering (PBR) system, so materials in the world react to light realistically. You can even bring your own textures into the game with ray tracing enabled.

Minecraft takes to ray tracing so well because it’s somewhat of a blank canvas. It’s not trying to have reflections, clear shadows, or god rays, giving RTX tech a clear path to shine.

More to come

Nvidia's DLSS 3 in Cyberpunk 2077.
Nvidia

I wanted to touch on three highlights and a couple of misses for RTX over the past several years, but there are dozens of other examples of great-looking RTX games. Cyberpunk 2077, Metro Exodus, and Marvel’s Spider-Man come to mind, but there are tons of other games that look great with RTX features turned on.

This certainly isn’t where the train stops, either. With ray tracing in consoles, and even on the iPhone 15, we probably have hundreds of games packing RTX tech coming up as Nvidia works its way to 1,000.

Editors' Recommendations

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Razer made the best gaming mouse even better
The Razer Viper V3 Pro sitting among its accessories.

The Razer Viper has been one of the best gaming mice you can buy since its inception, and last year's Viper V3 was no exception. Just a few months after introducing the mouse, Razer is taking another swing at the design with the Viper V3 Pro. It promises the same excellent shape, high-performance sensor, and esports-level accuracy, but with a slew of additional features that build on the original design.

I've been testing out the Viper V3 Pro for a few days now. There are enough changes here to warrant a new entry into Razer's growing lineup of competitive gaming mice, and they not only make the mouse more performant, but also more comfortable to use. The $160 price tag is tough to stomach considering Razer's mainstream focus with the original Viper V3. But if you have the cash to spare, this Pro update is worth every penny.
Going for HyperSpeed

Read more
How I unlocked the hidden modes of DLSS
dlss hidden modes dt respec

Nvidia's Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) has become a mainstay in modern PC games. We all know about the basic presets to choose from in games that set the quality level and tip the scales toward performance or image quality.

But under the surface, there are a range of hidden presets that make DLSS behave in different ways. These are how developers tweak how DLSS reacts to a given input resolution and specific game content. They aren't meant to be user-facing, but a clever mod allowed me to open up the hood of DLSS and get my hands dirty. Not only do these hidden presets provide far more customization,  but they also reveal how DLSS really works.
Meet DLSSTweaks

Read more
Don’t buy the RTX 3060 in 2024
The RTX 3060 installed in a gaming PC.

Nvidia's RTX 3060 is the most popular GPU around, and it's not even close. According to the latest Steam hardware survey, the 2021 GPU is in close to 7% of gaming PCs. That's a huge slice of the pie. For reference, the second most popular GPU, the RTX 2060, sits at just under 4%. It's easy to see why the GPU is popular, too. You can pick it up for between $250 and $300 -- and for even less used -- and it comes with a critical 12GB of VRAM.

It's the go-to GPU for maxed-out 1080p gaming in 2024, but based on my testing, it probably shouldn't be. The RTX 3060 is a workhorse, and for a large range of games, it's one of the best graphics cards you can buy. When it comes to the latest, most demanding games, however, the RTX 3060 struggles to keep up.
The litmus test

Read more