Skip to main content
If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.

Fortnite now supports ray-tracing, because why not?

Spit-shined shootin'.

What does Fortnite need ray-tracing for, anyway? Epic's blockbuster murderfest isn't exactly gunning for hard realism, after all. Regardless, RTX ray tracing brings high-fidelity reflections, shadows and ambient occlusion to Fortnite today, alongside support for DLSS 2.0 to run those high-res rays at an agreeable frame rate. Fine, you've got me - I'll admit it does look quite nice after all.

A fortnight (hah!) after announcing Fortnite's spit-shined new looks, Epic's battle royale now supports RTX ray tracing and DLSS 2.0 - assuming you've got the cards for 'em.

Watch on YouTube

I'll be frank. When I think about games that'd benefit from expensive, real-time ray tracing, Fortnite isn't high on the list. But while you can miss me with tiny reflections on helmets and gun scopes, it does look quite stunning when once-flat glass facades become building-sized mirrors. Ray traced shadows and ambient occlusion are more subtle, but should play nicely into murder island's sweeping, accelerated day/night cycle.

Still, many of these updates might be hard to appreciate in the heat of battle. To that end, Epic and Nvidia have bashed together a creative map to show off RTX features in the best possible light. You can pop in for a look by visiting Island Code 9189-0518-5408, or catch a deep dive over on Nvidia's post detailing the update.

Today's update also adds DLSS 2.0 support to Fortnite, a piece of AI-powered upscaling wizardry for improving performance at higher resolutions. While Fortnite isn't as demanding as, say, Death Stranding, tech expert Katharine reckoned "you’d be nuts" not to turn it on in KojiPro's walk 'em up, and the same likely applies here. The update also brings in something called Nvidia Reflex, which supposedly improves latency times by cutting through the GPU render queue.

As per the Fortnite blog, you'll need at least an RTX 2060 to switch on new features (though they recommend an RTX 2080 or higher). Mind, if you're picking up a spankin' new RTX 3080 today, you'll be more than set to go.

Rock Paper Shotgun is the home of PC gaming

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.

In this article

Fortnite

Android, iOS, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Mac, Nintendo Switch

Awaiting cover image

Fortnite Battle Royale

Video Game

Related topics
About the Author
Natalie Clayton avatar

Natalie Clayton

Contributor

Writes news when everyone else is asleep, sometimes
Comments