AMD Noise Suppression arrives to challenge RTX Voice

Hayden Dingman/IDG
Any PC gamer worth their 20,000 DPI custom-weighted mouse knows that communication is vital in multiplayer games. Compared to that end, AMD is looking to make you better to understand when using a mic in-game. The brand new AMD Noise Suppression feature may use your graphics card to intelligently screen background noise from your own environment, as an air conditioner as well as the sound from your speakers. If you are using this new capacity to say things such as gee gee GTFO newb, well, thats you.
The brand new system is really a rival to Nvidias RTX Voice feature (now area of the Nvidia Broadcast suite), accomplishing pretty much a similar thing. Regardless of the association with gaming and the usage of the Ryzen 5000+ CPU or Radeon RX 6000+ GPU, the AMD Noise Suppression feature isnt limited by in-game communication. Once its configured in the driver itll use any app that uses voice input, including Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Discord, and that other one that no-one appears to remember.
Also contained in the Adrenalin 22.7.1 driver update are some notable OpenGL improvements, which AMD claims can improve performance in games like Minecraft by around 90 percent on some RX 6000 cards. Radeon Super Resolution (the older standard, not the more impressive FSR 2) now works on more notebooks with discrete RX 5000 and 6000 cards in hybrid graphic setups, also it now works for borderless fullscreen mode. It is possible to download the most recent Adrenalin driver package here.