Dom Pepyat
July 20, 2021 11:31 GMT
Capcom launched a new Resident Evil Village A patch that seems to improve the performance of the game on PC after verification Denovo Technology is the culprit of stuttering.
Last week, it was reported that “Resident Evil Village” implemented anti-piracy DRM Denuvo and Capcom’s own DRM layer at the same time, causing the game to continue to freeze on the PC.
After demonstrating that DRM is indeed the culprit of performance problems, Capcom promised to update the game to address the concerns of PC players that if they resort to piracy, they will get better games. After all, no publisher wants their players to feel that way.
Today, Capcom updated the Steam version of the game, hoping to solve these problems. In the instructions on the game website, the publisher confirmed that the latest patch has “adjusted” the game’s anti-piracy technology, which will help improve overall performance.
The patch also adds support for AMD’s FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) upsampling technology. Therefore, in theory, if you are playing games on Steam now, your frame rate should be fine.
If you are eager to play more Resident Evil content as soon as possible, you may have to wait: Resident Evil Re:Verse, a free multiplayer shooting game for every copy of Resident Evil Village, has now been postponed to 2022 so that developers can” Continue to work hard to provide a smooth gaming experience.”
Let us hope that it won’t stutter when it finally comes out.