{"id":45041,"date":"2022-08-14T12:01:49","date_gmt":"2022-08-14T12:01:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/marvels-spider-man-remastered-ray-tracing-dlss-fsr-2-0-benchmarks-comparison-screenshots\/"},"modified":"2022-08-14T12:01:49","modified_gmt":"2022-08-14T12:01:49","slug":"marvels-spider-man-remastered-ray-tracing-dlss-fsr-2-0-benchmarks-comparison-screenshots","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/marvels-spider-man-remastered-ray-tracing-dlss-fsr-2-0-benchmarks-comparison-screenshots\/","title":{"rendered":"Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered – Ray Tracing, DLSS & FSR 2.0 Benchmarks & Comparison Screenshots"},"content":{"rendered":"
Sony has just released Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered on PC and as we’ve already reported, Nixxes has handled this PC version. Thus, and prior to our PC Performance Analysis, we’ve decided to benchmark the game’s Ray Tracing effects. We’ve also compared native resolution against NVIDIA’s DLSS and AMD’s FSR 2.0 techs.<\/p>\n For these benchmarks and comparison screenshots, we used an Intel i9 9900K with 16GB of DDR4 at 3800Mhz and NVIDIA’s RTX 3080. We also used Windows 10 64-bit, and the GeForce 516.94 driver.<\/p>\n Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered does not feature any built-in benchmark tool. As such, we’ve decided to test the game in street areas with a large crowd of people. Therefore, consider this a stress benchmark test as other areas can run smoother.<\/p>\n Before continuing, we should mention a bug\/issue that made our work difficult. For unknown reasons, performance can go downhill when changing resolutions or upscaling techniques. This issue can appear randomly, and here is a video showcasing it. At the start of the video, the game runs with DLSS Quality in 4K with 55-60fps on our RTX3080. However, at the end of it and after numerous resolution changes, DLSS Quality runs with 30fps. So keep that in mind in case you encounter bizarre performance issues.<\/p>\n Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered uses Ray Tracing in order to enhance its reflections. And\u2026 well\u2026 that’s it. The good news here is that Nixxes is offering a lot of settings to tweak. However, and at their maximum values, these RT effects are really heavy on the CPU.<\/p>\n This is the first time we’ve experienced major performance issues with our Intel i9 9900K, even at 1080p (with RT Max). While our CPU was able to push an average of 64fps, it could also drop to 57fps. By disabling RT, we were able to get framerates higher than 100fps at all times.<\/p>\n