Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Gaming
  4. News

My most anticipated game of 2024 is getting the full Nvidia treatment

Add as a preferred source on Google
A character gearing up for battle in Black Myth: Wukong.
Game Science

As if I wasn’t already looking forward to Black Myth: Wukong enough, Nvidia just announced that the game is getting the full RTX treatment when it launches on August 20. We see new games with ray tracing and Nvidia’s Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) all the time, but Black Myth: Wukong is joining a very small list of titles that currently leverage the full suite of features Nvidia has available.

The game comes with, as Nvidia describes it, “full ray tracing.” That undersells the tech a bit. As we’ve seen with games like Alan Wake 2“full ray tracing” means path tracing. This is a more demanding version of ray tracing where everything uses the costly lighting technique. It’s taxing, but in the new games that we’ve seen with path tracing, such as Cyberpunk 2077 and Portal with RTX, it looks stunning.

Recommended Videos

To get Black Myth running at decent frame rates, the game will use DLSS 3.5. This includes the full suite of DLSS features, including Super Resolution, Frame Generation, and Ray Reconstruction, the last of which is particularly noteworthy. Currently, it’s only available in two titles: Alan Wake 2 and Cyberpunk 2077. 

Black Myth: Wukong isn’t the third game to receive support, though. Nvidia also announced that it’s bringing Ray Reconstruction through DLSS 3.5 to both Portal with RTX and Naraka: Bladepoint. The Portal with RTX upgrade is available now, so you can download the game for free and try out the new additions — given you have an RTX 40-series GPU.

Blue light casting in Portal RTX.
Digital Trends

The details on Naraka are a bit sparse. Nvidia says it will get a path tracing update “soon” to three areas that are available through the PvE and PvP modes. We don’t know what three areas those are now, but Nvidia says further areas will see a path tracing upgrade in the future.

Nvidia first announced DLSS 3.5 in August of last year, with the first game arriving in September (Cyberpunk 2077’s Phantom Liberty expansion). Since then, we haven’t heard about any other games sporting the tech. Black Myth: Wukong launching with support is a positive sign that we’ll still see more games with features like Ray Reconstruction, though I don’t imagine it will be a mainstay like upscaling tech in modern titles.

Maybe we’ve seen such slow adoption due to how restrictive DLSS 3.5 is. You need an RTX 40-series GPU to unlock the full suite of features, which, even with GPU prices falling, are still expensive graphics cards. In addition, the impressive Ray Reconstruction feature is only currently available in demanding path tracing modes, effectively locking out lower-end options in Nvidia’s current-gen lineup.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Tarot card readers are using ChatGPT for divinations, I am utterly surprised at this AI pivot
ChatGPT is helping interpret cards, but its confident answers could flatten the ambiguity tarot depends on
Book, Comics, Publication

AI has already moved into some of the most emotionally fragile parts of life, from eulogies to dead-person chatbots that promise one more exchange with someone who’s gone. Now the same technology is being pulled into tarot card readings.

A 2026 study examined how tarot practitioners use AI when reading cards for themselves, and the shift lands far outside the usual productivity script. Tarot card readers are bringing ChatGPT into questions that are personal, symbolic, and often unresolved.

Read more
Microsoft brings tab intelligence to Edge browser, and I dearly wish Apple would add it to Safari
Say goodbye to juggling 20 tabs and hello to Copilot doing the heavy lifting.
Microsoft edge new tabs feature

Everyone will agree that managing tabs is not easy. You start researching a topic, and before you know it, you have 15 tabs open and forget which tab contained the information you actually needed. This happens to me regularly, and I use several tricks, including tab groups, bookmarks, and browser extensions, to keep my tabs in check. 

If you are one of the minority Microsoft Edge users, you will be happy to know that Microsoft has just solved this problem with its latest Edge update, and I wish Safari, my main browser, would add something like this, too.

Read more
I’m not sold on Googlebook’s future, but it sure has two big wins I can’t ignore
Magic Pointer and native Android app could help Googlebook prove its future
Googlebook

Shortly after its announcement, the discourse surrounding Googlebook quickly took over forums, subreddits, X, and other social media platforms. Google just introduced a new category of laptops built around Gemini Intelligence, Android integration, ChromeOS, phone continuity, premium hardware, and OEM partners.

Yet, I am still not fully sold on the larger future Google is describing here. Google has been in laptops for more than 15 years through Chromebooks, and the company itself frames Googlebook as a move from an operating system to an “intelligence system.” This sounds like the "future" of laptops, but it also carries the Google problem, where it introduces an interesting idea before the ecosystem has proven itself.

Read more