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

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

NVIDIA announces DLSS 5 with photorealistic lighting to change the future of gaming

The next generation of the company’s AI upscaling tech launches this fall.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Resident Evil Leon DLSS 5 On and Off Featured
NVIDIA

At its GTC 2026 event, NVIDIA has officially announced DLSS 5, a new version of its Deep Learning Super Sampling technology. The next generation of its AI-powered graphics technology introduces neural rendering techniques designed to create more realistic lighting and materials in games. The feature is expected to launch later this year.

DLSS has long been used to upscale lower-resolution frames into higher-resolution images using AI, boosting performance while maintaining visual quality, with DLSS 4.5 being the most recent update. The new version takes that concept further by using neural networks to assist with parts of the rendering pipeline itself, rather than simply reconstructing pixels.

What’s new in DLSS 5?

The biggest shift with DLSS 5 is the introduction of neural rendering, a technique where AI helps generate elements of a scene, such as lighting, materials, and surface detail, rather than relying entirely on traditional rendering methods. The system can produce photorealistic lighting effects and more accurate material reflections, potentially improving realism in ray-traced environments while maintaining high frame rates.

The technology builds on earlier DLSS features like Super Resolution, Ray Reconstruction, and Frame Generation, but moves further toward an AI-assisted graphics pipeline where neural networks play a bigger role in how scenes are constructed.

Which hardware will support DLSS 5?

NVIDIA hasn’t officially confirmed which GPU architectures will support DLSS 5 yet, but the company has said the technology will arrive alongside RTX 50-series GPUs later this year. According to Digital Foundry, NVIDIA described the lighting improvements shown in its demo as “transformational,” with the feature expected to roll out around Fall 2026.

Interestingly, the demo setup used to showcase DLSS 5 wasn’t running on a typical gaming PC. Digital Foundry reports that NVIDIA used two GeForce RTX 5090 GPUs: one dedicated to running the game itself, while the second handled the DLSS 5 neural-rendering workload. This setup is currently required because the technology still needs significant optimization, particularly in terms of performance efficiency and VRAM usage.

That said, NVIDIA says DLSS 5 is ultimately designed to run on a single GPU, and that’s how it’s expected to ship when the technology launches publicly later this year.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Apple announces iOS 27 with speedy app launches, Siri AI, and Liquid Glass refinements for your iPhone
The performance improvements are real, the search rebuild is overdue, and the fact that it runs on every iPhone 11 and newer means almost nobody gets left behind.
Electronics, Computer, Mobile Phone

Apple announced iOS 27 at WWDC 2026, and the message this year is quite simple: this one is faster, more polished, and comes loaded with new Apple Intelligence features, including the new Siri AI. It isn’t the most visually dramatic update, but it addresses some of the most frustrating aspects of using iOS. 

The headline performance numbers, if you ask me, are significant. With iOS 27, Apple claims 30% faster app launches, 80% faster AirDrop transfers (something that I’m personally quite excited about), and enhanced responsiveness for older iPhones. Clearly, the ‘Snow Leopard’ style upgrade is fixing all the underlying plumbing, but there’s more to it than just refinement. 

Read more
Apple Intelligence is coming to Safari with smarter tabs, custom extensions, and password fixes
Safari gets a major AI upgrade focused on productivity and privacy
WWDC 2026 Apple Intelligence Safari Featured

Apple is bringing a fresh batch of Apple Intelligence features to Safari, and unlike some AI announcements that feel like solutions searching for problems, these actually seem pretty practical. Announced at WWDC 2026, Apple revealed several new AI-powered tools for Safari, including automatic tab organization, custom extension creation through natural language, webpage monitoring, and automated password updates.

Safari can now organize tabs, create extensions, and fix passwords with AI

Read more
Estonia gave thousands of students free ChatGPT instead of banning AI in schools
Estonia is trying to stop AI brain rot with even more AI
Representative Image

While schools around the world are still debating whether artificial intelligence should be restricted in classrooms, Estonia has chosen a radically different approach: give students more AI, not less. The Baltic nation has distributed free ChatGPT access to nearly 20,000 high-school students as part of a nationwide experiment that could reshape how education systems think about AI-assisted learning.

According to a report by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ), the initiative targets 10th and 11th-grade students across Estonia and represents one of the first large-scale attempts to integrate generative AI directly into national education systems rather than treating it as a threat. Officials realized early that students were already using chatbots extensively for homework and learning tasks, making outright bans increasingly unrealistic.

Read more