A brand-new Ghost of Tsushima PC showcase has been released, showing off the game running with a ray tracing modification and DLSS3 on an NVIDIA RTX 4090.
Yesterday we reported on some mods for the recently-released PC version of the game, and today we wanted to share how absolutely great this port from Nixxes can look on a powerful setup. Courtesy of YouTuber ‘Beyond Dreams‘, this new video shows Ghost of Tsushima running in 8K resolution with ‘Massihancer’s’ ray tracing preset. In addition, the showcase uses ‘NiceGuy’s’ complete Ray Tracing shader, offering global illumination, ambient occlusion, volumetric fog, color grading, and more. We’ve included the new 8K showcase below:
It’s an impressive showcase for sure, although you’ll need quite the rig in order to pull this off. For this video, the YouTuber used the following setup:
Mainboard: Asus Prime Z 790
CPU: Intel 14700K
RAM: Corsair Vengeance 32 Gb RAM
GPU: Nvidia RTX 4090 ASUS TUF
SSD: Samsung 870 evo 1 TB
HDD: W.D. 1 TB
AIO WC: Artic freezer 280
Supply: EVGA Supernova G3 850 Watt
Do you wonder how the vanilla PC version compares to the PlayStation 5 version? Check out this comparison video right here.
Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut was released worldwide for PC last week. The game quickly set a new concurrent player peak (CCU) record on Steam for a single-player game published by Sony, thereby by surpassing God of War. Here’s what we wrote about the 2020 Samurai title from Sucker Punch Productions in our review of the PS4 version back then:
“There are some fantastic vistas of Tsushima island here, several of which you can glimpse in the screenshots attached to this review. The lighting, including the volumetric one, is stunning to say the least. Part of the merit goes to the artists, too, who have designed a rendition of Tsushima island so beautiful to elicit a strong desire to go visit the real place one day. The colors are warm and vibrant, though if that’s not your thing there’s always the option to play the entire game in the ‘Akira Kurosawa mode’, which adds black bars, black-and-white filters and a number of other tweaks to make the game look like one of the famed director’s movies.”