How good is Microsoft’s DirectStorage at reducing PC game load times? For one game, the technology cut load times to around 2 seconds or less.
At the Game Developers Conference on Wednesday, the studio behind the upcoming action-RPG title Forspoken demoed its game running Microsoft’s DirectStorage technology.
The benchmarks show DirectStorage can load event cutscenes in 1.9 or 2.2 seconds over a PC’s NVME SSD storage drive. Playable levels will load up in 1.7 or 1.9 seconds.
“By using DirectStorage with M.2 SSD, you can start playing almost with no loading time,” said Teppei Ono, technical director for Luminous Productions, the developer of Forspoken.
That said, it’s not exactly a huge improvement over existing storage APIs if your PC already has a NVME SSD or SATA SSD drive. As you can see in the benchmarks, DirectStorage only shaved load times by a few deciseconds when compared against a standard Win32 API.
According to the demo, the DirectStorage API also did little to cut down the loading times for playable game scenes when the PC had an HDD drive. “HDDs, on the other hand, are not delivering the anticipated result due to hardware performance limitations,” Ono said.
Still, the DirectStorage API promises to be a boon for PC gaming. A graph from Luminous Productions’ presentation says current games can take more than 10 seconds to load while using an M.2 NVME or SATA SSD. But by tapping DirectStorage, that drops to single digits on Forspoken.
In addition, the presentation noted one-second load times are possible through DirectStorage, but achieving them requires further optimization of in-game assets. "However, there are so many file types of assets in the game that optimizing them all takes time and effort," Ono
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