With some extremely impressive results to show for it, Bethesda partners with Polish company x-kom to push Doom Eternal to its limits.
As demonstrated by a demo from Bethesda and Polish hardware firm x-Kom, popular first-person shooter Doom Eternal can run at 1,000 frames-per-second (FPS). The exceptional casing rate, which id Software developer Billy Khan conjectured was conceivable back in March, is a noteworthy accomplishment for the game’s id Tech 7 engine.
According to a video and blog article posted by Bethesda on Tuesday, the team began by assembling a rig with ultra-high-end components, built around an Intel eight-core i7 9700K processor and ASUS RTX 2080Ti graphics card. The team achieved a frame rate above 500 FPS with this set-up, but they would need to overclock it much farther to reach or exceed 1,000 FPS. By using a liquid nitrogen cooling system, the team was able to overclock all CPU cores to about 6.6 GHz, finally yielding a maximum frame rate of 1,006 FPS (and even higher on a tutorial map). Fans absolutely haven’t squandered preparing power while making amazing Doom fan works, however, 1,000 FPS play meetings could just occur in a controlled proficient setting. Next-gen console ports of the game won’t have the option to create a casing rate anyplace close to 1,000 FPS, yet the vigor of the motor looks good for the nature of the up and coming ports. All things considered, a few players probably care less about the game’s specialized exhibition and more about guaranteeing that Bethesda doesn’t restore highlights like the Denuvo against conning framework.
Bethesda did remove the Denuvo system after a considerable backlash, so hopefully, the company will continue to listen to its fanbase. Doom Eternal is available now on PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Stadia.