God of War feature

God of War – DLSS 2.0 vs FSR 2.0 Screenshots & Performance Comparison


As we’ve already reported, Santa Monica Studio and Jetpack Interactive released a new patch for God of War that added support for AMD FSR 2.0. As such, we’ve decided to test it and compare it with DLSS 2.0.

For these comparisons, we used an Intel i9 9900K with 16GB of DDR4 at 3800Mhz and NVIDIA’s RTX 3080. We also used Windows 10 64-bit, and the GeForce 512.95 driver.

Like DLSS 2.0, AMD FSR 2.0 uses temporal upscaling techniques. Therefore, FSR 2.0 should look much better than FSR 1.0, and similar to DLSS 2.0. And it appears we’re right. Below you can find some comparison screenshots between DLSS 2.0 (left) and AMD FSR 2.0 (right). As you can clearly see, these upscaling techniques look the same.

God of War offers sharpening sliders for both DLSS 2.0 and FSR 2.0. For these comparisons, we set the Sharpening slider to 10% on both DLSS 2.0 and FSR 2.0. By setting the same Sharpening setting, we can get a better comparison between these two upscaling techniques.

God of War DLSS 2.0-1God of War AMD FSR 2.0-1 God of War DLSS 2.0-2God of War AMD FSR 2.0-2 God of War DLSS 2.0-3God of War AMD FSR 2.0-3 God of War DLSS 2.0-4God of War AMD FSR 2.0-4 God of War DLSS 2.0-5God of War AMD FSR 2.0-5 God of War DLSS 2.0-6God of War AMD FSR 2.0-6

Now the good news for RTX owners is that DLSS 2.0 runs faster than AMD FSR 2.0 on an RTX GPU. DLSS 2.0 was constantly running better by 5-8fps in 4K on our NVIDIA GeForce RTX3080. For comparison purposes, AMD FSR 1.0 Ultra Quality was also faster than FSR 2.0 Quality.

On the other hand, AMD FSR 2.0 appears to have less shimmering than DLSS 2.0 in the scene we used for our initial DLSS benchmarks. Apart from that specific area, though, both of them look the same.

All in all, we were really impressed by AMD FSR 2.0 as it offers an image quality that is as good as DLSS 2.0. For RTX owners, there is no question here; you can use DLSS Quality and enjoy a higher performance (unless the shimmering we showcased annoys you). For everyone else, AMD FSR 2.0 is the way to go.