AMD Noise Supression Comes to Take on RTX Voice


Every PC gamer who has played with a custom-weighted mouse that has 20,000 DPI understands that communication is essential in multiplayer games. AMD is determined to make it easier to hear your game audio even if you use a microphone in-game. The brand new AMD Noise Suppression feature will use your graphics card to detect background noise from your surroundings, like an air conditioner or even the sound from your own speakers. i''m bonnie and you are This feature can be used to say "gee gee GTFO" or other similar phrases.



The new system is a direct competitor to Nvidia''s RTX Voice feature (now part of the Nvidia Broadcast suite), accomplishing more or less the same thing. The AMD Noise Suppression feature doesn''t only apply to games-related communication regardless of its connection to gaming and the use of an Ryzen 5500+ CPU or Radeon RX 6600+ GPU. Once the driver is set up, it will work with any app that uses voice input. This includes Zoom, Discord, Microsoft Teams, Discord and other apps that use voice input.



In the Adrenalin 22.7.1 driver update are a number of notable OpenGL improvements that AMD claims can improve performance in games such as Minecraft by as much as 90 percent on certain RX 6000 cards. Radeon Super Resolution (the older standard rather than the more impressive FSR 2) now works on notebooks equipped with discrete RX cards, 5000 and 6000, in hybrid configurations, and it now works in fullscreen mode that is borderless. The most current Adrenalin driver package is available here for download.