Gaming

New NVIDIA Game Ready drivers version 528.02 including support for the NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti and 2 new games


New NVIDIA Game Ready drivers version 528.02 including support for the NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti and 2 new games



NVIDIA ha thrown out his latest version of Game Ready drivers version 528.02 that offers support for new games from the day they are released. This time support for games has been included Conqueror’s Blade and Dakar Desert Rally where support has also been added for NVIDIA DLSS3 and offer a higher FPS rate thanks to NVIDIA RTX 40 Series cards. In addition, support has also been added for NVIDIA’s latest addition, the new RTX 4070 Ti announced a few days ago and which is already on sale.

Geeknetic New NVIDIA Game Ready drivers version 528.02 including support for the NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti and 2 new games 1

In addition to support for these games and the new graphics, it also fixed some issues known, including:

  • Crashes in the new RTX Portal when changing modes and resolutions with GeForce Experience recording active.
  • Black or gray screens in Outer Wilds game with driver version 522.25.
  • Brightness issues on some laptops with NVIDIA graphics.

Geeknetic New NVIDIA Game Ready drivers version 528.02 including support for the NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti and 2 new games 2

In addition, they have also been known some problems that will be solved in future versions of the drivers, some of these are:

  • Problems turning HDR on and off using a non-native resolution.
  • Monitor flickers on waking from sleep when DSR or DLDSR is active.
  • Forza Horizon 4 (Steam version) may freeze after 15 min of gameplay.

In the release notes all these known issues are available along with the full list of changes introduced.

Update now from the NVIDIA website or from the software NVIDIA GeForce Experience to get the latest improvements included in this version.

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Article Editor: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I gutted my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles that I write at Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, contemporary and retro, on the 20+ consoles I own, in addition to the PC.

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