Rainbow Six Extraction turns the formula established by Rainbow Six Siege on its head, pitting you and and group of teammates against a horde of zombie-like enemies instead of against another team. The game comes with Nvidia’s Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) built-in, but even with a supported graphics card, I’ve been using the in-engine dynamic resolution setting.
With this setting, I was able to double my frame rate, all with a surprisingly low impact on image quality. Those with the best graphics cards can use DLSS; for the rest of us, Rainbow Six Extraction‘s dynamic resolution is a dream come true.
To boost your Rainbow Six Extraction frame rate on any graphics card, turn on the dynamic resolution option. You’ll find this in the graphics menu with multiple different settings. Turn the dynamic resolution to Dynamic 25%-100% and set your target frame rate to whatever your monitor’s refresh rate is.
Rainbow Six Extraction is far from the only game with a dynamic resolution setting — the recently released Halo Infinitehas one too — but it’s not like the others you’ve probably encountered. The dynamic resolution in Rainbow Six Extraction is excellent. Not only does it more than double my frame rate, but it also looks great.
On my personal rig with an RTX 3090 and an Intel Core i9-10900K, I managed an average of 100 frames per second (fps) at 4K with the highest quality preset. That’s great, but Extraction is built on the same engine as Rainbow Six Siege. That’s a game that demands a competitively high frame rate, and Extraction is no different. My minimum frame rate also dropped below 60 fps, causing some minor stuttering in areas dense with Sprawl.
With the dynamic resolution setting on, I doubled my frame rate —
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