Tag: RTX

  • Quake II RTX: An old FPS gets an unnecessary coat of paint.

    Quake II RTX: An old FPS gets an unnecessary coat of paint.

    There seems to be a lot of hay going around about ray-tracing technology in video games. That stuff where lights reflect off of surfaces that makes it look more like real life. Probably the biggest technology arms race next to high dynamic range rendering and accurate water physics. For a modern video game, ray-tracing can be a valuable tool to make your game world feel more alive. But not so much if you’re trying to bolt on ray-tracing to an old shooter from 1997.

    YouTube player
    Official trailer. Source: NVIDIA Geforce’s YouTube.

    Quake II RTX is a remaster of the 1997 shooter classic, but with the engine upgraded to support NVIDIA’s RTX ray-tracing technology. Released on June 6, 2019 for PC by NVIDIA’s in-house Lightspeed Studios, this game was made as a way to show off their fancy new RTX technology. Quoting from NVIDIA’s blog:

    “We are giving Quake II back to gamers with a bold new look, as Quake II RTX,” said Matt Wuebbling, head of GeForce marketing at NVIDIA. “Ray tracing is the technology that is defining the next generation of PC games, and it’s fitting that Quake II is a part of that.”

    Now, I personally have my doubts that a remaster of a shooter that’s nearly 30 years old truly defines the next generation of video gaming, but I don’t work at NVIDIA. It’s not like this kind of marginal upgrade hasn’t existed beforehand: Doom95 as a shell to play Doom and Doom II in Windows 95 without needing to run DOS, GLQuake being an OpenGL render for Quake back when graphics accelerator cards were still new to the PC market, that sort of thing. Usually if you wanna tout this technology you’d use a fairly recent game. But let’s see how Lightspeed took Quake II and made it look shiny and pretty for a modern PC audience.

    Since there might be folks who are wondering: I had this article idea before Microsoft announced using their Copilot generative AI demo that trained off Quake II data as a base. This was merely a coincidence. In fact, what did inspire me to write about this was another RTX game that just came out: Half-Life 2 RTX, a version of Half-Life 2 that uses the RTX technology, just done by a group of modders rather than in-house at NVIDIA Lightspeed in the case of Quake II RTX and Portal with RTX.

    Once more, into the breach…

    Now, I’ve talked at length about Quake II several times over the years. Mostly the unofficial expansions like Juggernaut: The New Story for Quake II and maps made to advertise a mostly forgotten ‘90s TV show. But my opinion on the original Quake II hasn’t really changed much: It’s a solid shooter that feels kinda bland artistically. It’s the embodiment of the John Carmack era of id Software: Fancy technology over anything else. It’s a perfectly fine game, and the Nightdive remaster from 2023 rebalanced the game a bit to push it from being merely a solid game for its time, to standing with the id classics like Doom and Quake in a much better light.

    At the time I did not have a computer that could really handle running Quake II RTX smoothly. My previous PC, which housed a GeForce GTX 1060, was not enough to hit the specifications to turn on the RTX features. Once I got my current computer, which has a GTX 3070 in it, I was able to run Q2RTX pretty smoothly at around 60 frames per second with not much trouble. Much like other tech demos, sometimes it’s worth upgrading the PC just to try it out. Provided it doesn’t cost an arm and a leg to upgrade, that is.

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