We are just a few days away from the public start of punishment: the latest entry into the 32 -year -old ancient franchise of ID software. Take a leaf from Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, which used ID Tech 7 engines, the new domestic dome uses ray tracing all the time for global light, reflection and shadow. As I discovered in my performance analysis, this is not as much demand on your vein as you can expect, and even a handheld gaming can drive a PCID tech -operated shooter. Well, for a few seconds.
The video has been caught on an Asus ROG Elly, which is set on its 30 W performance mode, with Dome: In addition to promoting FSR performance, the low graphics preset is made to use. As you can see, it manages to draw a permanent 30 FPS, for about 40 40 seconds, before drivers are guaranteed.
In fact, the game was launched with a big warning to see how the GPU drivers of Rogue Eli were old and do not recommend to use with the Dome: Dark Edge, so it is not as if the aforementioned accident is unexpected.
However, the disappointing part of all of them is not accident or blurred, heavy graphics. It is a fact that it is more difficult for GPU drivers to update to the ROG ally. Unlike the AMD desktop and laptop graphics processors, where I can download the latest adrenaline software, I am stuck in waiting for Asus to release better drivers for Rogue Eli.
It seems that this is a panic problem with any handheld gaming PC that uses AMD Rising Z1 processor for CPU and GPU duties. Any other APU from AMD’s lineup can be updated through adrenaline, but no Z1S – they have to do through a handheld PC vendor.
Certainly, the choice of allies, steam decks, and other portable PCs is really ready to handle a fully -ray game, and I can only get 30 FPS using FSR performance, which makes everything so fading that all the luggage is lost.
That said, on a slightly 7 -inch screen, it doesn’t look too bad, and I would be happy to rotate with my shield and shot gun for a quick blast. But unless Asos decided to update GPU drivers for the ally, there is no possibility of being, and as more games become RT only over the years, handheld shopkeepers will need to do better with drivers.