Scaling V3.0.0.1 ^new^ — Lossless

“Feels invasive,” someone muttered.

In the digital age, we often encounter situations where we need to enlarge images or videos without compromising their quality. This could be for various reasons such as improving the viewing experience, enhancing details for analysis, or ensuring professional-grade outputs for commercial use. Traditional scaling methods often result in a loss of quality, leading to pixelation and a generally unsatisfactory outcome. However, with the advent of Lossless Scaling V3.0.0.1, a game-changing software solution has emerged that promises to transform how we approach image and video enlargement.

For the best results, cap the game's native frame rate to a value that divides evenly into your monitor’s refresh rate (e.g., 60 FPS on a 120Hz screen, or 30 FPS on a 60Hz screen). Lossless Scaling V3.0.0.1

While not a replacement for native DLSS/FSR in competitive shooters, it is a .

Lower your in-game resolution to a value below your monitor’s native resolution (e.g., set a 4K monitor to 1440p, or a 1080p monitor to 720p). “Feels invasive,” someone muttered

The headline feature of V3.0.0.1 is the refinement of the LSFG model. It can now effectively your perceived frame rate (X3 mode). If your base game runs at a stable 30 FPS, LS can generate two intermediate frames for every real one, outputting a fluid 90 FPS experience. 2. Improved Latency Management

Games with fixed 30/60 FPS limits can be easily smoothed without modifying game files. Traditional scaling methods often result in a loss

For the price of a coffee on Steam, it breathes new life into older graphics cards, turns devices like the Steam Deck and ROG Ally into high-refresh-rate powerhouses, and allows PC enthusiasts to max out demanding ray-traced titles without breaking the bank. Version 3.0.0.1 refines this magic formula, making it cleaner, faster, and more seamless than ever before. If you want to troubleshoot a specific setup, let me know: Your models The game you are trying to optimize Your monitor's refresh rate

The jump from 3.0.0 to 3.0.0.1 was rapid, indicating a hotfix. The deep-dive reveals:

A one-time purchase on Steam that breathes new life into aging hardware. The Caveats