• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Tech News, Magazine & Review WordPress Theme 2017
  • Home
  • Review
    My favorite robot vacuum now supports Matter

    My favorite robot vacuum now supports Matter

    Hands on with Aqara’s new Matter-compatible camera

    Hands on with Aqaras new Matter-compatible camera

    Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

    Samsungs Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

    Google Pixel 10A review: Just buy the 9A

    Google Pixel 10A review: Just buy the 9A

    How to ditch Ring’s surveillance network

    How to ditch Rings surveillance network

    Lego Smart Brick review: My kids are not impressed

    Lego Smart Brick review: My kids are not impressed

  • Gaming
    Weird Nintendo never went away

    Weird Nintendo never went away

    Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers

    Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers

    DLSS 5: Has Nvidia’s AI graphics technology gone too far?

    DLSS 5: Has Nvidia’s AI graphics technology gone too far?

    Remedy’s live-service shooter Firebreak is getting its final major update

    Remedys live-service shooter Firebreak is getting its final major update

    Nvidia’s DLSS 5 is like motion smoothing for video games, but worse

    Nvidia’s DLSS 5 is like motion smoothing for video games, but worse

    Capcom’s next big game explores the horrors of AI

    Capcom’s next big game explores the horrors of AI

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Intel announces Core Ultra 200HX Plus CPUs for high-end gaming laptops

    Intel announces Core Ultra 200HX Plus CPUs for high-end gaming laptops

    MacBook Air M5 review: a small update for the ‘just right’ Mac

    MacBook Air M5 review: a small update for the just right Mac

    Framework raises RAM and storage prices again

    Framework raises RAM and storage prices again

    One of this rugged phone’s cameras is a pop-out action cam

    One of this rugged phone’s cameras is a pop-out action cam

    Yashica’s new retro point-and-shoot revival sounds surprisingly capable for $100

    Yashicas new retro point-and-shoot revival sounds surprisingly capable for $100

    The new MacBook Air debuts with a $50 gift card as the M4 model hits its best price

    The new MacBook Air debuts with a $50 gift card as the M4 model hits its best price

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

    PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

    The Beats Studio Pro are nearly $200 off ahead of Amazon’s big spring sale

    The Beats Studio Pro are nearly $200 off ahead of Amazons big spring sale

    Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation

    Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation

    The MacBook Neo is a winner

    The MacBook Neo is a winner

    PC makers are not ready for the MacBook Neo

    PC makers are not ready for the MacBook Neo

    Apple reduces App Store fees in China to ward off regulators

    Apple reduces App Store fees in China to ward off regulators

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
    My favorite robot vacuum now supports Matter

    My favorite robot vacuum now supports Matter

    Hands on with Aqara’s new Matter-compatible camera

    Hands on with Aqaras new Matter-compatible camera

    Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

    Samsungs Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

    Google Pixel 10A review: Just buy the 9A

    Google Pixel 10A review: Just buy the 9A

    How to ditch Ring’s surveillance network

    How to ditch Rings surveillance network

    Lego Smart Brick review: My kids are not impressed

    Lego Smart Brick review: My kids are not impressed

  • Gaming
    Weird Nintendo never went away

    Weird Nintendo never went away

    Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers

    Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers

    DLSS 5: Has Nvidia’s AI graphics technology gone too far?

    DLSS 5: Has Nvidia’s AI graphics technology gone too far?

    Remedy’s live-service shooter Firebreak is getting its final major update

    Remedys live-service shooter Firebreak is getting its final major update

    Nvidia’s DLSS 5 is like motion smoothing for video games, but worse

    Nvidia’s DLSS 5 is like motion smoothing for video games, but worse

    Capcom’s next big game explores the horrors of AI

    Capcom’s next big game explores the horrors of AI

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Intel announces Core Ultra 200HX Plus CPUs for high-end gaming laptops

    Intel announces Core Ultra 200HX Plus CPUs for high-end gaming laptops

    MacBook Air M5 review: a small update for the ‘just right’ Mac

    MacBook Air M5 review: a small update for the just right Mac

    Framework raises RAM and storage prices again

    Framework raises RAM and storage prices again

    One of this rugged phone’s cameras is a pop-out action cam

    One of this rugged phone’s cameras is a pop-out action cam

    Yashica’s new retro point-and-shoot revival sounds surprisingly capable for $100

    Yashicas new retro point-and-shoot revival sounds surprisingly capable for $100

    The new MacBook Air debuts with a $50 gift card as the M4 model hits its best price

    The new MacBook Air debuts with a $50 gift card as the M4 model hits its best price

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

    PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

    The Beats Studio Pro are nearly $200 off ahead of Amazon’s big spring sale

    The Beats Studio Pro are nearly $200 off ahead of Amazons big spring sale

    Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation

    Apple’s $549 AirPods Max 2 add better ANC and live translation

    The MacBook Neo is a winner

    The MacBook Neo is a winner

    PC makers are not ready for the MacBook Neo

    PC makers are not ready for the MacBook Neo

    Apple reduces App Store fees in China to ward off regulators

    Apple reduces App Store fees in China to ward off regulators

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
The Latest Tech News | Breaking Bews In Thchnology
No Result
View All Result
Home Gaming

Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers

admin by admin
March 18, 2026
Nvidia has lost the plot with gamers
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nvidia surely thought it was doing a good thing for gamers by “upgrading” the faces of our favorite video game characters. But that just shows how much the company has lost the plot.

Nvidia could’ve marketed its new DLSS 5 real-time lighting technology as a way to make future, next-gen games look better. Instead, it told the world that games people already know and love look bad. It focused on retconning characters’ faces. And now, confronted with the predictable backlash, Nvidia’s CEO is telling critics that we’re “completely wrong.”

Regardless of how it works, the tech presents as an AI filter that tries to optimize everyone and everything — artists be damned.

A 15-year-old Hogwarts student? Now he’s like an adult soap opera star trying to pass as a teen:

An already-aged professor at Hogwarts? What if we made her look even older?

Do you like shadows? What if we just removed them in… Assassin’s Creed Shadows?

One answer: investors. Nvidia is now a $5 trillion AI company, and the average gamer probably seems like an afterthought when you spend all day selling chips to companies making chatbots. (Financially, even Nvidia’s networking business is bigger than gaming now.)

Other answers may be darker. Some gamers have railed against companies for years because, among other terrible things, their characters aren’t sexy enough.

Down the road, there’s another problem: Everything might start looking the same. As my colleague Andrew Webster points out, that’s what happens when your tech looks like AI slop. So what is Nvidia doing about this?

Damage control is underway. Nvidia GeForce PR director Ben Berraondo quickly told my colleague Tom Warren that developers like Capcom have “detailed artistic control” over their look of their characters, while also implying that the game’s developer approved the changes to Resident Evil Requiem protagonist Grace, above.

Meanwhile, Starfield game developer Bethesda tweeted, “This is a very early look, and our art teams will be further adjusting the lighting and final effect to look the way we think works best for each game. This will all be under our artists’ control, and totally optional for players.”

Here’s the pinned comment atop Nvidia’s YouTube video saying much the same:

Image: YouTube

But in an industry that just can’t stop having layoffs no matter how well games perform, people are skeptical that the artists will have creative control, and journalists are ready to hear from disgruntled developers among Nvidia’s DLSS 5 partners. (BTW, I’m sean.hollister01 on Signal.)

What I want to know is: How did Nvidia not see this backlash coming, especially after previous controversies?Why didn’t it take this new tech in a completely different direction, one focused on the future of gaming instead of the present?

Gamers seem less impressed with each new generation of gaming graphics. The graphical advances don’t seem as big as they were between Super Nintendo and N64, between PS1 and PS2, between Half-Life and Half-Life 2. Photorealism has managed to stay elusive even in the 4K era, with many games still delivering muddy graphics, rough textures, and cutscenes that look “more real” than gameplay.

That photorealism is exactly where Nvidia’s tech seems to be leaping forward, and I can’t help but agree with some of Digital Foundry’s enthusiasm when I watch their whole video at once. I want to see a generational leap in graphics, too. There’s an opportunity here.

But Nvidia’s examples kill me. No one should be retconning game characters’ faces like the examples we’ve seen above, regardless of whether they’re doing it with AI or different human actors.

It didn’t need to be this way! This same exact technology could have been a win for Nvidia — if it had marketed it for future next-gen games.

Imagine this: It’s March 16th, 2026, and Nvidia has one more thing to show us on the GTC 2026 stage — not a puppeteered Disney robot and a cringeworthy AI-generated music video, but a tech demo like none we’ve seen before. It’s a brand-new game we’ve never heard of, and the level of detail is incredible. Look at the water! Look at how light naturally seems to envelop those video game objects you could practically reach out and touch! Look at how you can make out every stone in that castle wall, and how these characters naturally cast shadows on themselves! Look at this world filled with natural light and gorgeous characters that actually belong, because they don’t clash with the art direction for this brand-new title!

Surely that took the power of an entire server to prerender, right? Nope, Nvidia reveals: It’s “the company’s most significant breakthrough in computer graphics since the debut of real-time ray tracing in 2018.”* Some would say, Wow, I’d buy a new GPU or a GeForce Now subscription to play games that look like that!

*A real line from Nvidia’s press release.

But the real gasp would come when Nvidia’s CEO flicks a switch to turn it on and off. Not only is this next-gen game demo running in real time, the base graphics are so much more rudimentary — they don’t require an investment in next-gen tech! It can build off what developers are already doing today. It’s like having an entirely new graphics engine, except you can keep using the engines you already have. Bethesda, Capcom, and Ubisoft could tell us — without showing us yassified faces — that they’ve seen such excellent results applying this to existing games that they can’t wait to bring us new ones.

Unfortunately, Nvidia didn’t decide to market the tech this way. Nvidia lumped it in with DLSS, the same suite of AI-enhanced performance-enhancing technologies that many gamers love to hate, at the same time PC gamers are reeling from Nvidia-powered AI servers creating a worldwide shortage of RAM. We’re only a year on from Nvidia’s latest “fake frames” controversy, and a month on from Google’s generative AI gaming backlash. By now, Nvidia should know better.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Sean Hollister

    Sean Hollister

    Sean Hollister

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Sean Hollister

  • Gaming

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Gaming

  • Nvidia

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Nvidia

  • PC Gaming

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All PC Gaming

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

Tags: Gamer consumer issuesNvidia gaming strategy
admin

admin

Next Post
PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

PSA: Hackers can raid iOS 18 with an infected link

Please login to join discussion

Recommended.

Valve, makers of Half-Life and Portal, are working on three full VR games

September 11, 2025
"Unlock Stunning Photography with the Canon EOS R6 Mark III and Its Amazing Lens"

Unlock Stunning Photography with the Canon EOS R6 Mark III and Its Amazing Lens

December 31, 2025

Trending.

"Tim Cook May Depart as Apple CEO Next Year: What It Means for the Tech Giant"

Tim Cook May Depart as Apple CEO Next Year: What It Means for the Tech Giant

November 17, 2025
"Possessor: A Fast-Paced Action Game with a Slow-Burning Start"

Possessor: A Fast-Paced Action Game with a Slow-Burning Start

November 17, 2025
"Nintendo Switch 2 Update Restricts Third-Party Docks Without Explanation"

Nintendo Switch 2 Update Restricts Third-Party Docks Without Explanation

November 17, 2025
"Asus Falcata Review: Ambitious Split Ergo Gaming Keyboard Falls Short"

Asus Falcata Review: Ambitious Split Ergo Gaming Keyboard Falls Short

November 17, 2025
"The Disappearance of TV Cameras: Exploring the Shift in Broadcast Technology"

The Disappearance of TV Cameras: Exploring the Shift in Broadcast Technology

November 17, 2025
The Latest Tech News | Breaking Bews In Thchnology

Stay ahead of the tech curve. Our website delivers clear, concise updates on the latest gadgets, AI breakthroughs, and software, empowering your digital future.

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
  • Apple
  • Applications
  • Computers
  • Gaming
  • Gear
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Smartphone
  • Microsoft
  • Photography
  • Security

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.