With enough updates to fill another plate, NVIDIA is here with another driver update. This round continues release 381 with driver version 382.53, hands us some fixes, and prepares us for Dirt 4 and Nex Machina, both of which are being released this month.

Starting with bug fixes, V-Sync should now work with NVIDIA Fast Sync. This means that users will no longer experience tearing caused by no frame rate limit. In Aerofly RC 7 corruption from enabling shadows should now be fixed, and for games running the Tombstone engine there is a fix for corruption caused by a driver update as well. Bringing up the end of the list, using multiple displays with SLI should work out now, as a secondary display should no longer remain blank when switching from Clone or Extended mode to secondary-only display mode.

Coming up first in Game Ready support, Dirt 4 is the latest in Codemaster’s very long and very comprehensive portfolio of racing games. With this week’s successor comes a new state of the art for graphics in dirt racing. In NVIDIA’s writeup of Dirt 4 this level of detail will call for a GeForce GTX 1060 while playing at 1080p, a GTX 1070 for 1440p and a GTX 1080Ti to maintain 60 FPS in 4K. Though NVIDIA notes that with MSAA disabled the GeForce GTX 1080 is able to exceed 60 FPS in 4K as well.

Our other new release gaining support this week is Nex Machina, which looks to me like a merging of Geometry Wars, a bullet hell shooter and the entirety of a modern game engines demo reel. To put that in English, this looks fun. While not the stretch for realism made by Dirt 4, NVIDIA still gives stiff hardware recommendations for Nex Machina. This time we still see the almost standard recommendations of the GeForce GTX 1060 at 1080p and the GTX 1070 at 1440p, but this time we hop down to the GTX 1080 for 4K.

In addition to the preceding updates, NVIDIA has also added or update SLI profiles for Bulletstorm: Full Clip Edition, Little Nightmares, Player Unknown’s Battlegrounds and Transformers Online.

Anyone interested can download the updated drivers through GeForce Experience Drivers tab or on the NVIDIA driver download page. More information on this update and further issues can be found in the 382.53 release notes.

Source: NVIDIA

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  • vailr - Saturday, June 10, 2017 - link

    The correct numbering is 382.53; 382.85 is non-existent as of June 10, 2017.
  • SpetsnazAntiVIP - Saturday, June 10, 2017 - link

    Just tested and there is no SLI profile for Dirt 4. It sure would be nice to have some games that actually take advantage of my SLI 1080 TI's...
  • Wtfisgoingon - Sunday, June 11, 2017 - link

    Download Nvidia Profile Inspector!

    There are literally dozens of settings you can't see via control panel, most of them have terrible default settings that you can change as well as import & export profiles and create your own.

    If you need help let me know
  • HammerStrike - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    Profile Inspector is a poor substitute for proper SLI support. It's better then no option at all, but it's a crap shot as to:

    1. whether you can find setting that utilize your second GPU,
    2. If you can get utilization on the second GPU, does your average FPS improve? Many times it actually goes down.
    3. If you can find settings that utilize your second GPU and provide an average FPS improvement, does it negatively impact your frame pacing? More often then not, FPS might go up, but at the cost of stuttering / lag
    4. Assuming the above is still in line, is the benefit worth the time invested?

    As an owner of two 780ti's for the last 3 years I can say this will be my last multi-GPU setup.
  • nevcairiel - Sunday, June 11, 2017 - link

    SLI is seeing less and less support in recent years. Games need to support it to some degree, its not something NVIDIA can just turn on for every game - if it doesn't work, there is no SLI profile.

    In general its probably not worth it anymore to buy a high-end SLI setup like that, as the majority of games just doesn't use it.
  • Hurr Durr - Sunday, June 11, 2017 - link

    Why would you waste money like that.
  • BrokenCrayons - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    The industry is making a gradual shift away from multiple GPUs and support is therefore on the decline. Because there are only a small number of people this impacts adversely, I think you'll unfortunately encounter this more and more in the future. DX12, after all, puts a lot of the SLI support burden on cost-sensitive (translation - cheap) game publishers.

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