Ubisoft’s Star Wars Outlaws has acquired a brand new replace, including help for DLSS 4 with Multi Body Technology for RTX 50 sequence house owners. It additionally gives improved Body Technology for RTX 40 customers whereas updating to the newest model of PlayStation Spectral Tremendous Decision for PS5 Professional gamers.
In any other case, there isn’t an excessive amount of to talk of by means of adjustments. The patch fixes points like a steep incline stopping Kay from dismounting from her speeder and louder-than-expected audio from ships flying overhead. Higher to have these adjustments than not, although.
Star Wars Outlaws is on the market for Xbox Sequence X/S, PS5, and PC. Take a look at our overview right here. It’s acquired a number of updates enhancing fight, stealth, and traversal alongside a paid story DLC, Wild Card. You may learn our overview – we gave it a six out of ten.
A second DLC, A Pirate’s Fortune, is out this Spring, which sees Kay working with the pirate Hondo Ohnaka to settle “previous scores.” Keep tuned for extra particulars on its launch date within the coming weeks.
PATCH DETAILS (model 1.0.5.1):
FULL PATCH NOTES:
Star Wars Outlaws on PC now options DLSS 4 with Multi Body Technology for GeForce RTX 50 sequence, which boosts FPS through the use of AI to generate as much as three frames per historically rendered body.
DLSS 4 additionally introduces sooner single Body Technology with decreased reminiscence utilization for RTX 50 and 40 Sequence, and new transformer AI fashions for DLSS Ray Reconstruction, Tremendous Decision, and DLAA for all GeForce RTX GPUs, which reinforces stability, lighting, and element in movement.
Streaming:
- Fastened a crashing concern on streaming platforms when travelling to Renpalli Station
PC:
- Added help for NVIDIA Sequence 50 GPUs
PS5:
- PSSR has been up to date to the newest model for PS5 Professional customers
All platforms:
- Fastened a problem the place Kay couldn’t dismount the speeder when on a steep incline
- Fastened a problem the place audio from overhead ships could be louder than anticipated