Post-apocalyptic Russia is better with haptic feedback and adaptive triggers on May 24, 2021, 7:35
What just happened? Many praise the PlayStation 5’s DualSense controller as one of the console’s best elements. While it’s compatible with the PC, the full range of features have been lacking until now. Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition has become what is believed to be the first PC game to support the DualSense’s haptic feedback and adaptive triggers.
Developer 4A Games released an update for Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition on Friday, allowing the full range of DualSense features. Twitter user Donny (@mrdomino ) posted a video of the newly supported controller in action, and it looks pretty impressive.
Скандал с харьковчанкой, оскорбившей участников парада вышиванок: девушку серьезно наказали
rupor.info - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rupor.info Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Metro: Exodus Enhanced Makes The Best Case For Ray Tracing Yet
gamespot.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gamespot.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
When Metro Exodus first released in 2019, it managed to straddle the line between console generations. Its console versions dialed back the visuals to maintain a stable framerate while the PC version was one of the very first titles to offer support for hardware-accelerated ray tracing features via Microsoft’s DXR. The PC version looked leagues better than the console version, but when pushed to the limit, it was still capable of bringing the best PCs to their knees.
Fast forward a little over two years and 4A is releasing Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition. In a release that seems like it would be made explicitly for the PS5 or Xbox Series X, the reality is that PC gamers get a bit of an exclusive this time around. The development team has implemented the latest updates and features granted by the most recent GPU releases and has built a new version of the game that looks and runs better than ever before.
May 6, 2021 07:00 EDT
Metro Exodus Enhanced Edition launches today and PC (and will soon be released on next-generation consoles, too, albeit with a more limited feature set) as the first triple-A game that actually requires a graphics card with hardware support for ray tracing, and we ve got the chance to check it out in the past few days.
Let s begin with a brief technical explanation of what the talented developers at 4A Games actually focused on enhancing.
It s important to note that the developers themselves admit to be still using rasterization methods at certain points of the process, which means there s still a hybrid renderer at play here. To be more specific, they use it to determine the primary rays cast from the camera, as it s still a very efficient way that doesn t meaningfully sacrifice quality. These rasterized positions are then used via the lighting equation to generate direct illumination for a given surface.