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AMD is bringing FSR 4.1 upscaling to older GPUs like an elixir of new gaming life

Your older Radeon GPU is about to get a serious visual upgrade, and it won't cost you a thing.

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AMD RX 7800
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

If you own a Radeon RX 7000-series GPU and have been watching Nvidia DLSS users enjoy buttery smooth, sharp gameplay with a hint of envy, your wait is almost over. 

AMD’s Jack Huynh, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Computing and Graphics, confirmed in a tweet that FSR Upscaling 4.1 is coming to RDNA 3 GPUs this July, with support for over 300 games right out of the box.

As a lifelong gamer, I spend a lot of time thinking about how to push gaming experiences forward across CPUs, GPUs, software, and games.

My team and I have been working hard to evolve @AMD FSR 4 and bring it to more cards.

We power over 1 billion gaming devices worldwide. It’s… pic.twitter.com/91Z3vXpQap

— Jack Huynh (@jackhuynh) May 14, 2026

Until now, FSR 4.1 was exclusive to the newer Radeon RX 9000 series, running on RDNA 4. That left Radeon RX 7000 owners on the outside looking in, which was a shame given how capable those cards still are.

What can FSR 4.1 do for your games?

ML upscaling tech like FSR uses machine learning to deliver sharper visuals and higher frame rates. It essentially gives your card a performance boost in supported games. For mid-range cards, this is a meaningful upgrade.

The new RX 9000 series cards come with built-in AI accelerators that enable FSR 4.1. The older RX 7000 series cards don’t have this hardware, so the team at AMD had to optimize and validate the model for integer-based computation. 

This is a huge technical achievement on AMD’s part. The support for FSR 4.1 will breathe new life into older graphics cards, giving gamers better performance and visuals without investing in new cards. 

What about older Radeon RX 6000 owners?

AMD hasn’t forgotten about them either. FSR Upscaling 4.1 is confirmed to arrive for RDNA 2 cards, including the Radeon RX 6000 desktop and mobile GPUs, sometime in early 2027. 

The full compatibility list isn’t out yet, but this is particularly exciting news for anyone gaming on a laptop with a Radeon RX 6000 chip. I just wish that FSR 4.1 upscaling on older graphics cards doesn’t turn out like Nvidia’s DLSS 5, which made games look like AI slop.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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