We’re back – and perhaps surprisingly, we’re not short of tech and gaming news to discuss! While the world – and indeed the DF team – emerges bleary-eyed from the holiday break, the Consumer Electronics Show 2022 managed to offer up a range of interesting topics to discuss, while the whole NFT debate came into sharp focus with a statement from Square-Enix management that the firm would be pursuing the controversial blockchain technology.

Looking at CES, it was something of a curious show, to say the least. On the one-hand, there was actual new product to discuss: AMD revealed the Radeon RX 6500XT and Ryzen 6000 APUs… and we’re not entirely sure what to make of them. The APUs certainly look impressive – and it’ll be the first time we see RDNA2 graphics tech integrated alongside Zen CPU cores, but AMD itself muddied the waters on the chip’s capabilities by comparing a 28W part against a prior generation 15W equivalent. Not surprisingly, the ‘gen-on-gen’ gains were impressive but fundamentally, the power differential only opens up negative criticism. Similarly, offering performance numbers augmented by FSR upscaling – which rarely impresses at the noted 1080p resolution – only serves to give the impression that the true capabilities of the parts are being unnecessarily obscured.

Nvidia’s CES outing was thin on news, but again, there was new product: the long-awaited RTX 3050 is a GPU that should serve 1080p gamers well, while the RTX 3090 Ti looks like being extremely power-heavy, but will undoubtedly push performance higher than we’ve seen before – but the question is to what extent the gains will actually be worthwhile. Meanwhile, the elephant in the room is – as always – price and availability. AMD announced a reasonable-ish $199 price-point for the RX 6500XT but Asus has already confirmed a ‘real world’ €299, for France, at least. The RTX 3050 should do the job nicely at its advertised $249 but how much will it actually cost? Pricing and availability for any and all GPUs right now is hugely problematic, to the point where the entire PC DIY upgrade market is effectively in a state of paralysis. Why purchase a lovely new Intel Alder Lake or Ryzen 5000 CPU if you can’t upgrade your graphics hardware alongside it? Somehow, this needs to be addressed – I genuinely feel that at this point, the enthusiast PC market is losing patience – and hope.

00:00:00 Introductions00:00:34 CES 2022: OLED & QD-OLED News00:11:25 CES 2022: AMD & Nvidia Conferences00:23:48 CES 2022: BMW iX colour changing car & Sony Vision00:28:08 CES 2022: Intel Conference00:32:11 Square-Enix announces intent to go into NFT and blockchain00:40:59 Xbox Dev Mode gets “shut down”, but not really00:45:25 Alan Wake Remastered Adds Auto HDR Support on Xbox Series S/X00:49:31 DF Content Discussion: 2022 plans and resolutions01:00:27 DF Content Discussion: Game of the Year selections01:02:56 DF Supporter Q1: Why do you feel gaming has never taken off on Mac?01:08:47 DF Supporter Q2: I’m curious if we’ll ever see a DF Retro H20 part three?01:16:18 DF Supporter Q3: What are your thoughts on the current state of AAA gaming, and what are your thoughts on the future of AAA gaming?01:19:57 DF Supporter Q4: Is it possible that PSVR2 could be the leading platform for the most cutting-edge VR experiences for the next few years?01:22:26 DF Supporter Q5: From listening to the DF crew talk about ray tracing I gather that it is somewhat of an endgame in terms of real-time lighting techniques. I wonder, is there anything that ray tracing fundamentally can’t do?

Elsewhere, the Digital Foundry team discuss their New Year’s Resolutions – as they pertain to our work. Mine is pretty straightforward. It’s time to bring an end to the era of pixel counting and to shift the focus from numbers that completely disregard reconstruction technologies, replacing this with a testing methodology that attempts to objectively assess image quality rather than base resolutions. I guess the most notable example of pixel counting’s irrelevance would be Nvidia DLSS. It’s capable of delivering excellent image quality on a 4K display from a ‘native resolution’ of just 1080p. Knowing it is upscaling from 1080p is more of an academic point as opposed to learning anything objectively useful to the player, or to accurately assess the quality of the presentation. Similarly, when you look at temporal upscaling from Epic, Insomniac, 4A Games and many others, knowing what the internal resolution happens to be is far less useful than judging the result of the developer’s intention – to deliver a ‘4K-like’ experience that looks good on an ultra-HD screen.

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