Just last week, it was discovered that Nvidia's shiny new RTX 50 series cards had axed support entirely for 32-bit software, ...
If you were "lucky" enough to get hold of one of Nvidia's new RTX 50 graphics cards, you should really check it for problems.
9d
Hosted on MSNA Redditor has a solution for the lack of PhysX support with the RTX 50 series: running two GPUsNvidia's RTX 50 series lacks 32-bit PhysX support, impacting performance in older games. Pairing a 3050 GPU with a 5090 can ...
Nvidia dropping 32-bit PhysX from the RTX 50-series' CUDA infrastructure is another sign that game preservation can't depend ...
The once popular PhysX graphics technology by Nvidia is now out of support, leaving fans of the legacy games it powers ...
Some graphically intense PC games from 2005 to 2013 have issues showing off their prowess on cards like the RTX 5090.
End of an error Nvidia has officially retired 32-bit PhysX support on its latest RTX 50 series GPUs, marking the end of an ...
NVIDIA is officially ending support for 32-bit software in its latest GeForce RTX 50 Series of GPUs. This includes the 32-bit ...
PassMark reports that Nvidia has dropped 32-bit OpenCL support, rendering legacy code unusable on Blackwell (RTX 50) hardware ...
The change makes some classic PC games run poorly even on modern hardware due to a lack of GPU-accelerated physics.
I won’t terribly miss PhysX, because modern games have plenty ... It’s also just the latest evidence that its RTX 50-series cards aren’t the upgrades we’d hoped. My colleague Tom reviewed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results